Here is the list of pronouns in the order they appear in the text, assigned to their particular groups:
1. interrogative pronouns (the ones who ask a certain question): WHAT, WHAT
2. possessive pronouns (the ones which show a certain possession): YOURS, YOURS
3. personal pronouns (I, you, he, she...): IT, IT, YOU, YOU, YOU, IT, US
4. indefinite pronoun (you cannot exactly determine who it is about): EVERYONE, ANYONE, SOME, ALL, EACH
5. relative pronouns (connect a clause to a noun/pronoun): WHO, THAT, WHATEVER
6. demonstrative pronouns (point to a particular thing): THESE
Contrapositive is the negation of both the premise and the conclusion. in the other order
Let's take:
conditional statemet: all men are mortal (if one is a man, one is mortal)
the counterpositive is :
is one is not mortal, one is not a man - this statement is also true.
So, the correct answer is: its counterpositice is also true
Yes they indeed do since they are a school
Answer:
The conversation you write must sound natural for the characters.
Explanation:
More natural conversations between characters make your writing more fun to read. Reading a dialogue that sounds like it could actually happen engages the reader, and creates an investment in the characters themselves. Think of it this way, would you rather watch a movie with good acting or bad acting?