Answer:
Letter format is given in explanation.
Explanation:
To,
The Editor,
The Hindu Times,
Delhi.
Dear Sir,
This is to bring into your knowledge that there is frequent electricity breakdown in the Bihar and Banaras colony areas. The people living here in small houses and there is lack of ventilation in the house which creates suffocation. The people living here are very poor and are able to hardly earn their livelihood. They cannot afford generator or UPS for the compensation of electricity. There is even electricity failure in the hospitals which creates difficulties for the patients and they attendees. The breakdown has been major in past several days and for more than 15 hours there is no electricity in the area.
It is therefore requested that you pay immediate attention to this issue. I hope that this issue will be addressed by the concerned authorities soon.
Yours's Sincerely,
Praveen.
Inferior. 'Sub' as a prefix means 'under' or 'below', and indicates that the subject is in a relatively small proportion.
I think it might be c. but is it is wrong just tell me
Answer:
Pronoun
Explanation:
<u>In the sentence - </u><u>This is a big mess.</u><u> - </u><u>'this' </u><u>is used as a pronoun, to be exact </u><u>a demonstrative pronoun. </u>
A demonstrative pronoun is a pronoun that is used to point at something specific within a sentence. It can be items in space or time.
These pronouns are This, That (for singular), These and Those (for plural).
This / These are used for singular items that are nearby. That / Those are used for multiple items that are not near us.
<u>Examples:</u>
This is my cat. - we can point at it, the cat is near us.
That is a plane. - the plane is not near us, so we use 'that'.
These are my favorite toys. - we point at many toys, and they are near us.
Those are my classmates. - we point at the classmates, they are not near.
Why 'this' is not a determiner in the sentence - This is a big mess.
A determiner is a word that introduces a noun. <u>It always comes before a noun, not after or without a noun near!</u>
<u>This car</u> is bad.
<u>These pies</u> look delicious.
I hope it helped you :)