C a noun because I have to get the same exact thing to be done
Answer:
here, hope this helps :)
Explanation:
Dear Dahlia,
Paris is unbelievable at night! It's 10 pm, and I'm writing to you from a café. We arrived here two days ago. My friend Pierre picks me up. We toured the city during the day, and at night, we did walk along the River Seine. Today we are dining in Montamarte, and we visited the Louvre Museum. I did not like the food in Montmartre, but, I did love the area. I hope all is well with you! Don't work too hard!
Love,
Michelle
The answer is <em>swinging through the air</em>.
A dangling modifier is a word, phrase or clause which is misplaced or inappropriately distant from the word it modifies. As a result, it produces confusion and ambiguity.
In this example, it is not clear whether the children or the acrobats are "swinging through the air." The sentence is open to more than one interpretation and has a double meaning.