It is the last sentence that show the main idea.
<span><em>Yet
our modern world is full of books about Success and successful people
which literally contain no kind of idea, and scarcely any kind of verbal
sense.
</em>The central idea of this essay of G. K. Chesterton, which he surprisingly wrote in 1909 is to debunk all of those "get rich quick" and "become successful overnight" self-help books. He says that those books, even though they are created by a wild imagination are actually boring and offer no actual advice that would help anyone. <em>
</em></span>
Depending on the subject, he could go to his text book, online ebook, etc. He could look at his review if he was given one. He could find other books relating to the subject that could potentially help. (Not much to go on, hope this helps c:)
Unclear question. However, I inferred the actual question to be;
What is the antecedent of the pronoun? <em>Mrs. Edwards always writes her comments at the end of the essays.</em>
Answer:
<u>Mrs. Edwards</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
Yes, often in the English language the antecedent of a pronoun refers to a word that will be replaced by a pronoun. But remember a pronoun simply refers to a word used instead of a noun.
From the sentence;
<em>"Mrs. Edwards"</em> = a noun (the antecedent)
"her" = a pronoun.
Answer:
Work is done when an object moves in the same direction as the force is applied and also when force remains constant.
It’s D because those can be two separate sentences