I remember doing something like this in my English/U.S. History class, so we are in the same shoes. ¯\_✿ ³✿_/¯
Washington has a entwined history with the sport of baseball. From President William Taft to President Barack Obama, every president since William Taft - exept Jimmy Carter - has thrown at least one ceremonial pitch while in office. A lot of presidents have had a history in the sport of baseball. And some of them could have made a career out of it.
President Warren Harding, for example, owned a baseball team in Ohio. Dwight Eisenhower used to play on a junior baseball team at West Point. Even so, Washington did not have a baseball team for almost 3 decades, from 1971, till when the Nationals came in 2005. George W. Bush was the first president to throw a pitch in the new Nationals' new ballpark. The opening pitch of a baseball is truly a POTUS tradition, and always will be - I hope. -
Answer:
Julia tried hard to persuade me. However, I still did not go to the party.
Explanation:
a.)Whatever you do
d.)what to major in at college.
<span>Noun clauses begin with words such as how, that, and the "w" words like what, whatever, when, where, whether, which, whichever, who, whoever, whom, whomever, and why. </span>
And a noun clause is a dependent clause that acts as a noun. It can't stand on its own. It's connected to an independent clause.