Answer:
on, beneath, inside, around, under, by, at, with, throughout, over.
Explanation:
The rule of thumb for prepositional phrases, or what I've been taught, is what a squirrel can do to a tree. A squirrel can be on a tree, beneath the tree, inside a tree, around a tree, under a tree, by a tree, at a tree, with a tree, throughout a tree, or even over a tree.
Answer:
Union troops bombarded Confederate forts, Union forces sustained heavy causalties.
Explanation:
In the middle of the night of April 24, Admiral David Farragut led a fleet of 24 gunboats, 19 mortar boats and 15,000 soldiers in a daring run past the forts. Now, the river was open to New Orleans except for the ragtag Confederate fleet. The mighty Union armada plowed right through, sinking eight ships.
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.