Punctuation marks are important for recognizing the end of a statement and or drawing some out with an ellipsis. If you do not put them at the end of your writing/sentence, unless using a question mark(?) or exclamation point(!), then the reader/grader will not be able to know where your sentence ends and the new one begins, therefor rendering it a run on sentence.
Sometimes, reading things out loud can help a lot. "I had eat all the leftovers." Does that sound right? How about "I had eating all the leftovers," or "I had ate all the leftovers"? What about "I had eaten all the leftovers"?
If this doesn't work for you, think of it like this: you must always use the PAST PARTICIPLE after a form of the word "have." For example, "I had given you the present." Which of your options is most similar? Most likely, the answer is "eaten": "I confessed that I had eaten all the leftovers."
Answer: B. Eaten
Things in quotation marks are meant to be highlighted (“”)
1 - I (noun-subject) looked (verb) “above my roof”
2 - She (noun-subject) looked (verb) “over the hill”
3 - My mom (noun-subject) went (verb) “past the other car”
4 - I (noun-subject) leaned (verb) “against the window”
5 - I (noun-subject) looked (verb) “beneath my bed”
Hope this helped
Brutus is highly respected, and Cassius knows that joining with Brutus will give the conspirators credibility.
<span>That is the answer. I've studied it before so I'm 100% sure. </span>
<span>Cassius thinks that if Brutus joins they'll have a better chance at convincing the people that they were right since Brutus is honorable, and people listen to him.
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Answer:
Ok I dont know t lol my picture is blocked lol
Explanation: