Predicate Pronoun- We made the cake for HIM.
Indirect Object- Jen borrowed a CD from HIM.
Reflexive Pronoun- Me, MYSELF, and I decided to use that computer. (Not grammatically correct, but myself is the reflexive pronoun.)
Intensive Pronoun- He blamed HIMSELF for the lost.
Object of Preposition- Pat lived across the street from HIM.
Interrogative Pronoun- WHICH man was the murderer?
Demonstrative Pronoun- THAT old man played with a knick-knack.
Singular Indefinite Pronoun- Did ANYBODY go to the party?
Plural Indefinite Pronoun- EVERYBODY freeze!
The second one—I gave the dog a bath because he was filthy. There needs to be a connecting word between ‘I gave my dog a bath’ and her was filthy. This are both independent clauses, so a conjunction is needed.
Answer:
"I remember that song, and it always makes me feel a little sad to hear it," I admitted to Rosie.
I knelt down next to the woman's dog and said, "He's a beautiful dog. What's his name?"
"You just say that because you're jealous," I said to Marty as I put my license back in my wallet.
Explanation:
The sentences that use description to develop the narrator's personality are the second, third, and fourth ones.
Story writers create and describe their characters in the process called characterization. There are two main types of characterization:
- Direct characterization - the writer explicitly tells us about a character's traits.
- Indirect characterization - we find out more about the character from their thoughts, actions, appearance, interaction with other characters, etc.
The given sentences are examples of indirect characterization. We find out more about the narrator's personality from their interaction with other characters. The rest of the sentences don't contribute to the description of their personality, which is why they're incorrect options.
Because Antony and Octavius are angry at them for betraying Caesar and killing him. Brutus urges him because if they don't go and fight then they all will be killed