Keiko is the noun that is the antecedent of the pronoun "she" in the sentence. The antecedent comes before the pronoun, and in this case lets the reader know who "she" refers to.
In other words, you can change the pronoun "she" for Keiko and the sentence would have exactly the same meaning.
The answer is rx = 3.5 km
For good - convenient, brilliant, worthy, glorious, lovely, valid, genuine, significant
For strong - sturdy, influential, athletic, persuasive
these are all in different contexts of the words. I don't know which one you need, but look 'em over
Answer:
Both of these are true however if there is only one answer choice it is B.
Explanation:
Though it is good to summarize source information, it can be left alone, however any information taken from another source must be annotated as claiming others words as your own is considered plagiarism.
To form the possessive of plurals that do not end in s, add an apostrophe and s.