1. Your brother, who lives in Spain, is coming to visit us, isn't he?
2. A young lady was annoyed by her boyfriend she's sensitive.
3. Every old house has its strange stories, doesn't it?
4. There's nobody here related to me.
Answer:
... John recieve a major setback.
It becomes hard for him to accept the fact that the promotion he worked so hard for, was handed over to a new employee.
He started feeling cheated by his own organisation. This in return affected his performance too.
From being a top performer, he straightaway joined the likes of the end names in the list.
He decided to talk about it rather than staying quite.
He fixes a meeting with the top leadership and put forward his point.
To his surprise he found that the management was waiting for him to respond so they could check if he had the ability and strength to stand against the wrong.
He found that the new employee hired was to be his team mate after promotion.
He got his deserved promotion and was once again on his way to success.
<em>Please</em><em> </em><em>mark</em><em> it</em><em> as</em><em> <u>brainliest</u></em><em>. </em><em>Follow</em><em> </em><em>me</em><em> </em><em>I </em><em>will</em><em> </em><em>follow </em><em>back</em><em>. </em><em /><em /><em /><em /><em /><em />
Answer:
Completed thought
Explanation:
The sentence, "Flora flew a yellow kite" is a completed thought because it has a subject, a verb, contains a clause and ends with a punctuation mark which was a period in this case.
It is not a subject because a subject is the performer of the action in a sentence, and it is also not a verb because a verb is an action word, however, it contains a subject and a verb and contains a completed thought.
Answer:
Walden by Henry David Thoreau
A precursor to Granger's philosophy in Fahrenheit 451, Thoreau's classic account of the time he spent in a cabin on Walden Pond has inspired generations of iconoclasts to spurn society and take to the wilderness.
Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift
Swift's satirical 1726 novel follows the journey of Lemuel Gulliver to a series of fanciful islands, none more improbable than the England he left behind. The Bradburian idea of using a distant world as a mirror to reflect the flaws of one's own society doesn't originate here, but this is one early expression of it.
"Dover Beach" by Matthew Arnold
Arnold's enduring poem about a seascape where "ignorant armies clash by night" has also lent lines to Ian McEwan's novel Saturday, and provided the title for Norman Mailer's Armies of the Night.
The Republic by Plato
The deathless allegory of the cave, where men living in darkness perceive shadows as truth, is unmistakably echoed in the world of Fahrenheit 451.
Explanation: