Answer: The sentence that is written in second-person point of view is D. Wherever you go, there you are.
Explanation: <u>The second-person point of view is the "you" perspective. </u>Unlike the first person point of view,<u> it is used to refer to a person that is not the speaker</u>. Moreover,<u> the second-person point of view can be easily identified due to the use of second-person pronouns</u>, such as "you", "your" and "yourself". D) is the only one that includes the second-person pronoun "you"; therefore, this option is the one that represents the second-person point of view. In contrast, A) and B) are written in third-person point of view and C) in first-person point of view.
Answer:
2) weren't
3)was
4) was
5)was
6)wasn't
7) wasn't
8)weren't
9) weren't
10)weren't
11) was
12) wasn't
13) was
14) weren't
15) wasn't
Explanation:
2) they were held in Georgia
6) he was born in Zundert
7) they were held in south Korea and Japan
8) they are from Peru
9) They're from Liverpool
10) They were Greek
12) he was president from 1993 to 2001
14) The vikings were from Scandinavia
15) he was born in France
Answer:
Section 4
1. have been doing
2. has been doing
3. is working
4. are playing
5. I have been thinking
6. are staying
7. have been stealing
8. have been laying
Section 5
1. has been ringing
2. have been doing / have been playing / are learning
3. are leaving / have been staying
4. are thinking / not thinking / have been counting
5. has been talking / has been driving
6. have been looking
7. is waiting
I believe it is D because the allies weren't formed yet before war broke out but when it did, that's when the allies were formed.
Answer:
The sentence that uses omission correctly is:
C. One serious omission in the team list was the name of the coach.
Explanation:
<u>Omission is a noun</u>, which allows us to eliminate option B since the sentence is using it as a verb. <u>Omission means failing to include something or someone. When you omit, you leave out, you exclude</u>. Having that meaning in mind, we can easily eliminate options A and D, since the context in those two sentences does not allow for the use of omission.
<u>Letter C is the best option. It uses omission as the noun it is, and the context and the meaning are a match. According to the sentence, leaving the name of the coach out of the team list was a serious mistake.</u>