Answer:
Aakhama aauna sapani.......
hope it helps.
<h3>stay safe healthy and happy.</h3>
Brainly people only answer the most simplest problems on this site,but when it comes to a more difficult problem u fail to answer it because a few problems are to much for you"Mods".This site is suppose to be for people who need help with problems and I don't see any help being handed around here!!Don't waist your time
The grammatical and stylistic errors are
- Pennsylvania was governed by a member of the Penn family until the beginning of the Revolutionary War. -Passive voice
- The colony remained committed to William Penn's ideals for this span of so very many, long years. -Wordiness
- As governor of the colony, the first constitution was written by Penn and called for an elected legislature. -Subject-verb agreement error
- Penn's Christian values extended to the Native Americans, he paid them for the land and refused to exploit them. -Comma splice
- A Quaker, Penn sort of hoped Pennsylvania would be a haven for his fellow Quakers who faced continual persecution in England. -Informal word
- William Penn valued religious freedom and self-government, he established the colony of Pennsylvania in 1682 as a welcoming land for others with similar values. Pronoun-antecedent agreement.
Several grammatical and stylistic blunders occurred in the sentences above. Wordiness occurred when several words that would have been substituted for just one were used. Subject-verb agreement error happened when the verb did not correlate with the subject in the sentence.
'Sort of hoped' is an informal phrase. Passive voice occurs when the subject received the action of the verb. Pronoun-antecedent agreement error is the absence of a symbiotic relationship between the pronoun and the phrases that come after it.
Learn more about grammatical errors here:
brainly.com/question/22248106
Everyone defined "ignore" differiently from past experiences and perspective.
Being ignored, in my opinion, is an action where the individual pretend it's not there.
In Act II, Scene 2, Juliet expresses the fear that her love for Romeo has come too quickly.