It really would be helpful in further questions to give some context on what it wants. I know it wants you to conjugate something, but without the verb, it's difficult to see what it wants.
One that would probably work is "the bus will be clear at game time"
I think the answer is C because, in the beginning of her quote, she explains that you don’t need to be this special “person” or figure to be able to do something remarkable. Me Gies says, “People should never think that you have to be a very special person to help those who need you.”
TRY B. It resembles him ruling the country by himself without anyone to help judge the decision:)
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In my opinion, the correct answer is A. <span>It is the predicate of the sentence. The verb phrase in this sentence is "are invited to stay". It is a phrase and not just a regular verb because it has its own modifier ("to stay") that describes or completes it, providing additional information. This predicate is in passive voice because the subject is actually the one that undergoes the action (instead of doing it, as subjects normally do), whereas the agent (the one who actually does the action) is unmentioned here.</span>
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Develo</span>ping an effective paragraph requires a combination of sentences joined cohesively together to further a focused topic it requires seven steps, plan, gather, order, compose, elaborate, conclude and review.