Student drivers are required to keep a log of their supervised driving hours. However, not all students are diligent in their record-keeping.
The transition that should be used to combine these sentences is the following one: however. This adverb is used to introduce a statement that contrasts with or appears to contradict something that has been previously said. In this case, you are saying that student drivers should keep a written record of their supervised driving hours yet you are also stating that not all of them do it thoroughly and well.
Answer:
B.
Explanation:
Pronouns are the words used in the place of nouns to avoid repeating the word in a sentence.
For instance, if I am talking about my friend "Lara", and telling about.
"Lara is a tall girl. Lara have a blonde hair. Lara loves reading books."
So, to avoid the repetition of the noun, we use pronouns like "she" or "her".
Lara is a tall girl. She have a blonde hair. She loves reading books."
In the given sentence, the nouns are "Kwame" and "Enzo".
The correct pronoun to replace this is option B: Them.
<u>"Them"</u> is used to represent the group of people that have experienced the action described by the verb in the sentence. The action described in the sentence is "train".
So, the correct option is B.
<span>A
pronoun is a word, which we use instead of a noun, usually to avoid
boring repetitions. For example, in the following sentence, I am going
to swap the word "pronouns" for the word "them", simply because you will
get bored if I fill each sentence with the word "pronoun". There are
various forms of them.
Subject pronouns: I, You, He, She, It, We, You, They
Object pronouns: Me, You, Him, Her, It, Us, You, Them
Possessive pronouns: Mine, Yours, His, Hers, Its, Ours, Yours, Theirs
Relative pronouns: Which, whose, that, where, when....etc...
I could go on, but I reckon you get the idea now. Ironically, the word "pronoun" is actually a noun.
So the answer yes
</span>