Suddenly, the road is filled with loud noises, pungent scents, and pain that you may or may not be able to recover from. This is an aspect that movies and novels don't do well at portraying. It's the emotional equivalent of gazing without seeing.
The revision of these two sentences that uses a relative clause is "The orchestra that was seated on stage played a difficult score".
Relative clauses are<u> clauses that start with a relative pronoun</u>. In this case, <u>the relative pronoun that has been used is "that" </u>and <u>the relative clause is "that was seated on stage"</u>. Furthermore, a relative clause is used to identify or define the noun that precedes it. In this case, <u>the noun identified by the clause is "orchestra"</u>. Therefore, the relative clause "that was seated on stage" is postmodifying the noun "orchestra".
Answer:
I carefully prepared a homemade pizza crust and put on it the very freshest and tasty ingredients.
Explanation:
Why? The adverb, as it says, modifies the verb.
A lot of times, not all the time, they end in -ly
- In the first one "<em>most</em>" does nothing and the sentence doesn't seem to even have a verb. (to run, to walk, etc)
- In the second one it is getting closer, but too is not the adverb
- In the third one homemade is a adjective / describing word, not an adverb
- In the fourth one <em>carefully </em>is an adverb and it is <em>italiczed</em>.
<u>Trick:</u>
- Stacey ran quickly.
What did she do? Ran. How did she do it? Quickly.
Verb = ran
Adverb = quickly
Hope this helps, good luck!
(I typed out a lot more to try and explain it since you said you don't understand it at all)
Answer:
presenting dialogue that includes a contrasting perspective.
Explanation: