The following text can be filled up this way:
Last year 1. on Easter I went to England for a short holiday. I arrived in London 2 on Friday 3 by 11 o’clock 4 in the evening. I went to my hotel by taxi, which got me there in about an hour. I was so tired by then that I went straight to bed. When I woke up 5 in the morning I remembered that I had made an appointment to meet a friend 6 by 10:30. I thought I could never get ready 7 on time, but in the end, I had reached the cafe 8 by 10.15. My friend arrived 9 on time. 10 At 1 o'clock we went to a restaurant for lunch 11 and by afternoon we went to a museum
<h3 /><h3>What are the right words for the blank spaces?</h3>
The right words for the blank spaces are those words that fit into the description provided. The right preposition should match the context of speech being described.
So, in the text, we see certain prepositions and the ways that they are used in the sentences. For instance, while talking about the day when he arrived in London, the preposition, 'On' is used to provide the right relationship.
Learn more about prepositions here:
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We are to correct the error made in the sentence "<em>Neither Tabitha nor Miranda want to take out the garbage".</em>
The error in the sentence is not adding "s" to "want"
The sentence should be "<em>Neither Tabitha nor Miranda wants to take out the </em><em>garbage</em><em>".</em>
Tabitha and Miranda are two different individuals which makes them singular nouns.
- Plural nouns takes plural verbs
- singular nouns takes singular verbs
singular noun: Tabitha, Miranda
singular verb: wants, takes, drives.
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brainly.com/question/1810273
Answer: I believe that the answer is A.
I would put a comma before and or leave the comma out
A comma splice is where two independent clauses (complete sentences) are joined together with a comma without also including a conjunction such as "and" or "but." Sentences B and D above both contain comma splices (the comma after "century" in B and the comma after "areas" in D). D is also missing a capital letter at the beginning of the sentence. The problem in sentence C is the commas surrounding the word "however." When the word "however is used to join two independent clauses like this, it should be preceded by a semicolon and followed by a comma. In this sentence, the semicolon belongs after the word "area." The word "however" begins the second independent clause. Thus, the only correct sentence above is A.