The correct sentence is "They knew that it was she who created the beautiful painting," because the pronoun 'she' is used as a subject of the clause. You cannot use 'her' as a subject; it is usually used as a possessive pronoun.
The clause "it was she who created the beautiful painting" is grammatically correct because 'was' serves as the linking verb, making IT and SHE equal. So, if you are going to rephrase the sentence it would be 'She was the one who created the beautiful painting' and not 'Her was the one who created the beautiful painting'.
"She and her friends will go shopping at the mall"
nouns and pronouns in the subjective case are italicized. A noun in the subjective case is often the subject of a verb. For example: "The tree fell on my car", "the tree" is in the nominative case because it's the subject of the verb "fell".
Answer:
This is an interrogative question, therefore the correct answer is:
<h2>B. Asks</h2>
<em><u>Hop</u></em><em><u>e</u></em><em><u> this</u></em><em><u> helps</u></em><em><u> you</u></em><em><u>.</u></em><em><u>.</u></em><em><u>.</u></em>
Find below each word with its definition:
1. a verb form ending in -ing used as an adjective: participle
2. a verb form used as another part of speech: verbal
3. a verb form ending in -ing used as a noun: gerund
4. group of words without a subject or verb used as single part of speech: phrase
5. verb form preceded by to, used as a noun, an adjective, or an adverb: infinitive
6. phrase beginning with a preposition: prepositional phrase
7. prepositional phrase modifying a noun or pronoun: adjective phrase
8. participle with complements and modifiers: participial phrase
9. verb ending in -ing used with a helping verb: verb phrase
10. prepositional phrase modifying a verb, adjective, or adverb: adverb phrase
11. A conjunction that joins words or groups of words of equal rank: coordinating conjunction
12. An adjective clause that is essential to the meaning of the sentence: restrictive clause
13. A verbal form ending in -ing with its object and modifiers used as a noun: gerund phrase