<h2>Fragment: High up in the willow trees in the spring time.</h2><h3>
FURTHER EXPLANATION</h3>
A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought. A complete sentence has the following components or parts:
- Subject - doer of the action
- Predicate - the action or the verb
- Complete thought
A fragment is a group of words that do not express a complete thought. They are incomplete sentences. They may lack either a subject, verb or both.
<h3>Option 1: The first tiny purple crocuses bloomed in February.</h3>
This is a complete sentence. The subjects are the <em>crocuses</em> and the verb is <em>bloomed.</em> It also expresses a complete thought.
<h3>Option 2: High up in the willow trees in the springtime.</h3>
This is a fragment. It does not express a complete thought. It doesn't have a subject nor a verb.
<h3>Option 3: Covered in snow, the branches reflected the sunlight.</h3>
This is a sentence with the subject <em>branches</em> and verb <em>reflected. </em>There is a clear thought about the actor or subject of the sentence and the action.
<h3>LEARN MORE</h3>
- Learn more about independent clause brainly.com/question/2669118
- Learn more about dependent clause brainly.com/question/1838303
- Learn more about types of sentences brainly.com/question/1506
Keywords: fragment, sentence, subject, verb, predicate
Why the aedes what? What is the rest of the question?
Answer:
Silence is more powerful than noise.
Explanation:
Lindo Jong is Mei Mei's mother. Mother and daughter have a difficult relationship in this story, as their personalities and understanding of the world are quite different. Lindo Jong is always trying to motivate her children to be better and to be humble, but her advice is often misunderstood. She embodies the idea of silence being more powerful than noise. Eventually, when Mei Mei runs away and comes back home, her mother remains silent but disapproving, which greatly impacts Mei Mei.
Okay well since this is an unfinished question, I will just tell you about the report and Cabeza de Vaca.
Alvar Nuñez Cabeça de Vaca was one of four survivors of the expedition to Florida commanded by Pánfilo Narvaez. He spent eight years with the native tribes of the Texas-Northern Mexico region learning their languages and customs. Six of the eight years were spent in the vicinity of Galveston Island as a trader between tribes. Cabeza de Vaca, as an outsider, could carry out mutually beneficial trade between tribes that were at war with each other. When he and the three others left the Galveston area they functioned as faith healers among the natives.
When Cabeza de Vaca and the others reached the Spanish Empire outpost of Culiacan thousands of miles away on the west coast of Mexico in what is now the state of Sinaloa.
After of period of recovery in Culiacan, Cabeza de Vaca and the others traveled on to the city Guadalajara and from there to Mexico City. Many Spanish Empire officials recognized that Cabeza de Vaca's experience would make him extremely valuable on any future expeditions into the interior of North America. He knew several native languages and understood the cultures. Cabeza de Vaca himself wanted to go back and bring the native tribes into the Spanish Empire and convert them to Christianity by humane and enlightened means. But Cabeza de Vaca that if he were to carryout the spread of Christianity and Spanish civilization by humane means it could only occur if he were the leader of the expedition.
He undertook a perilous journey back to Spain to seek his appointment by the King to the leadership of another expedition. Unfortunately for Cabeza de Vaca and for the natives the King had already appointment Hernando de Soto to lead the next expedition. De Soto asked Cabeza de Vaca to join his expedition but Cabeza de Vaca refused. De Soto was a soldier, an accomplished military leader, and was not likely to give much credence to Cabeza de Vaca's concern for humaneness and fairness.
The King offered Cabeza de Vaca the leadership of an expedition to explore the northeastern part of North America but Cabeza de Vaca turned it down. However the King did appoint Cabeza de Vaca to leadership of an expedition but not in North America. The Spanish colony in the region of the Rio de la Plata in South America was in trouble. The Governor of the colony was missing and feared dead. Cabeza de Vaca was to go to Rio de la Plata area and seek out the missing governor and if that governor was dead Cabeza de Vaca was to take his place as governor.