Answer:
Jason - subject
had - verb
a birthday party - direct object
at his favorite Mexican restaurant - prepositional phrase
Explanation:
The subject of a sentence is the topic, that is, what the sentence is about. The sentence we are analyzing here is talking about Jason, so "Jason" is the subject. The verb "had" is not a linking verb, but an action verb. Its meaning is completed by the direct object that follows. We can ask the verb a question: What did Jason have? A birthday party (direct object). Finally, a prepositional phrase consists of a preposition and complements. In this case, the prepositional phrase "at his favorite Mexican restaurant" provides information as to where the birthday party was thrown.
An industry is a group of manufacturers or businesses that produce a particular kind of goods or services. ... Industry comes from the Latin industria, which means "diligence, hard work," and the word is still used with that meaning.
Answer:
<em>"At the bottom of page 54, Flagman and Man disagree
</em>
<em>on whether all women look alike or not, with Flagman
</em>
<em>stressing conformity. Both the young man and the old
</em>
<em>woman find their efforts to make a deep connection
</em>
<em>with another person thwarted by conventional attitudes
</em>
<em>about age. However, the woman seems to have achieved
</em>
<em>some inner freedom, saying, “Now I’m the woman I
</em>
<em>always wanted to be.”"</em>
Citation:
https://www.connectionsacademy.com/content/media/336756-142011-60623-PM-572143982.pdf