The question of how to practice morality and doing the right things falls under the category of ethics.
This is a complex sentence it includes a subordinate clause (one that CANNOT stand by itself), and a dependent clause. You can tell this because if I were to walk into a room and say, "When K and C read the same foldable....", you would be waiting to hear the rest, wouldn't you? A compound sentence has two independent clauses joined by a comma and a coordinating conjunction (but, and, for, nor, or, so, yet). A simple sentence is just an independent clause.
The answer is alliteration.
—Evidence—
•-Alliteration definition: the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words.
•- In the first part where it says “Today’s class will be silly, simple and singlehandedly...” it mentioned the same letter which is the letter S.
Answer:
#1 visited
#2 enjoyed
#3 home (im not sure if it's correct)
#4 houses
#5 likes
#6 prefers
Explanation:
Definition: The simple predicate of a sentence is the verb that is done in the sentence. It can be the action that happens, the state of being, or the linking verb. Hint: Ask yourself, "The subject did what?" It can help if you find the subject first.