Former President Barack Obama on Friday launched a direct and blistering attack on President Donald Trump and Republicans and called on Americans to get to the ballot box in November to "restore some semblance of sanity to our politics."
At one point referencing the "crazy stuff coming out of this White House," Obama told students and others gathered at the University of Illinois at Urban-Campaign that even if they don't agree with Democrats on certain issues, they should still want to see a "restoration of honesty and decency and lawfulness in government."
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So I want to be clear. I did not take sides in that late-night food debate. The truth is,
I think it means you judge people without even allowing them to say anything.
Based on the context in which "very wise" was used, it is an adjective phrase.
<h3>What is an adjective phrase?</h3>
This refers to a phrase that is doing the work of an adjective which is to modify a noun or pronoun.
In the above sentence, the pronoun, "you" was modified by saying the person was quite wise. This is therefore an adjective phrase.
Find out more on adjective phrase at brainly.com/question/139793.
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Simple topic of a text, themes can be divided into two categories: a works thematic concept is what readers think, a thematic statement is what the work says about the subject
Answer: Fragment
Explanation: It does not contain a subject and verb and object.