Answer:
I would say that yes, it is applicable to the story because the whole thing is about the narrator's team failing several times in multiple different ways, but they were given the courage to continue on by the narrator's dad. They learned that the success of the Madison team was not final as well. They may have beat them but only by 3 points.
Explanation:
Hope this helps :)
No, a run on sentence would be this:
There's so little time we have to get everything packed we have to leave in 2 hours we have to get every room and bla bla bla...
run on sentences never stop going. And most times, run on sentences can be changed to paragraphs.
Hope I helped!
On brainly I don't think that your supposed to tell people to do your work.
Answer:
using a semicolon between the clauses only with a conjunction
<em>The question has already been answered, but I guess you need an explanation.</em>
<em></em>
Answer:
<em>They are buying them for him</em>
<em />
Explanation:
To properly understand this, you need to know about the subject-object agreement.
This agreement follows:
[S] [P] [O}
<em>S: Subject represent who does an action</em>
<em>P: Predicate is what is being done</em>
<em>O: Object receives of the action.</em>
<em />
In the given words, the predicate is "buying"
So, you need to know who is buying something and what is being bought
<em>"They" -----> the subject </em>
<em>"are buying" ----> the predicate </em>
<em>"them" ---> the object </em>
<em>"for him" ---> to whom the object is being bought for</em>