Answer:
its the middle one Controversial
Explanation:
sorry if wrong ;(
The Putnams' lone surviving child out of eight. Like Betty Parris, Ruth falls into a strange stupor after Reverend Parris catches her and the other girls dancing in the woods at night.
Answer:
It depends on who you idolize.
Explanation:
If you idolize an actor then maybe ask questions like:
- What was your favorite movie/TV show you did?
- Would you rather be famous or a normal human being?
If you idolize a musician then ask questions like:
- How does being in concert make you feel?
- What is your favorite song that you have created?
- Do you get tired of your own music?
Make sure to ask some questions that aren't about their career that you would like them to ask you as well such as:
- How are you doing.. like mentally?
- How do you feel about yourself?
- How do you think I feel about you?
Etc.. make sure to personalize it according to whoever you "idolize" and yourself.
<em>Hope this helps!! :)</em>
"Are you sure you left it on the table?" asked Roberto. is the only correctly punctuated sentence here.
the first sentence requires a COMMA inside the quotations, rather than a period. "Judy said" is attached to the quote, because the quote is judy's words. you keep them together, rather than making them two separate sentences.
the third sentence is missing a comma as well. "oh no," sarah said... is the correct way to write it, with a comma after "no."
the fourth sentence is wrong for several reasons. your end punctuation goes inside your parentheses, and this sentence put the exclamation point after. "She laughed" additionally requires a period to end the sentence, stating that she laughed, then offering her dialogue. alternatively, you could place a comma after "laughed" and accept that for the verb leading into the quote.
A compound sentence contains two independent clauses joined by coordinator the coordinators as as followed: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so,
A complex sentence has an independent clause joined by by one or more dependent clauses. A complex sentence always has a subordinator such as Because, since, after, although, or when or a relative pronoun such as That, who, or which.