Answer:
Explanation:
alignment - pronoun: arrangement
the pens were in a perfect alignment on the desk
calamity - pronoun: evil
Public calamity was added to private bereavement.
eclipse - pronoun: blocking
the eclipse was so amazing everybody was in awe
generated - pronoun: created
every coco-cola can is generated
inconvenience - pronoun: trouble
the teacher walked out the door and said sorry for this inconvenience
periodic - pronoun: regular
everybody at my school is sort of periodic, its boring
prolonged - pronoun: extend
the test time was prolonged since the teacher felt bad for assigning it the other day
tenacity - pronoun: determination
people how climbed Mount Everest must have a lot of tenacity
The day started simple, me and my brother walking to school, but it quickly changed when my bullies appeared. My brother understood that they were mean to me because of my “choices” to be transgender. They screamed “tranny” and other slurs as they danced around us. My face was red and i was close to tears, my brother quickly grabbed me and pulled me to school. I was a little relieved but that quickly went away when those boys followed us, their slurs had turned into threats. One pulled a knife out of his pocket, the others cheered him on. As he ran to me and my brother, knife at the ready, i screamed for my brother to run. Picking myself up, I ran for an abandoned house. I didn’t look back until i heard a scream. I was already in the upstairs of the house, i ran back downstairs to see the boy on the table with a knife in his stomach. My brother stood over him staring at his bloody hands. The crimson liquid dropped down from the table at a steady rate. What had he done?
this was really fun thanks!!!
These words are not in italics so can you be more specific?
Compound sentences occur when two independent sentences are combined into a single sentence. Therefor the answer is "B. Erin and Maria are going to the mall, and John is going to the
<span> movies" and </span>"<span>C. After the rain stopped, the girls decided to go to the park"</span>
Yes, there is a difference, in most instances where you want to say you have visited somewhere, you say you have been to that place:
"I've been to London."
"I've been to the cinema."
<span>"I've just been to the toilet." </span>
<span>In these cases you are using been as the other past participle of go, and you have to use to as the preposition. </span>
However, if you are using been as the past participle, and want to indicate a state, or for how long you were somewhere, you can use been in.
<span>All the best,</span>