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lesantik [10]
2 years ago
9

What is Grammer!????​

English
2 answers:
alexandr1967 [171]2 years ago
7 0

Answer:

English grammar is the way in which meanings are encoded into wordings in the English language. This includes the structure of words, phrases, clauses, sentences, and whole texts. ... Unlike nouns in almost all other Indo-European languages, English nouns do not have grammatical gender.

Aleks04 [339]2 years ago
5 0

Answer:

the whole system and structure of a language or of languages in general, usually taken as consisting of syntax and morphology (including inflections) and sometimes also phonology and semantics.

Explanation:

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Explanation: What's happening as often as needed?  Lending

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Why read poetry?!?!
ohaa [14]

Answer:POETRY HELPS YOU UNDERSTAND THE SIGNIFICANCE OF WORDS THEMSELVES

Explanation:

im just kidding, because  a teacher wants to make us learn more than we have to and thts frustrating

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What the word effacted mean
Grace [21]

Efface, effected, or affected???

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Try These questions out and I’ll give you brainliest
vovikov84 [41]

Answer:

1. The old couch springs moaned as the rather large man sat down on it.

<u><em>Personification. It personifies the 'couch' as a human, 'moaning' when the large man sat on it.</em></u>

2. The hot sauce burned like fire when I bit into the taco.

<em><u>Simile. Compares the hot sauce to a fire using 'like'.</u></em>

3. I am so tired, yet I still have a million things to do before bed.

<u><em>Hyperbole. Uses an exaggerated expression to describe the things to be done.</em></u>

4. You can't find your book because your room is a pigpen. Please clean it.

<u><em>Metaphor. Comparison between the speaker's room to a pig pen without using the words "like" or "as".</em></u>

5. The piece of chocolate cake taunted me each time I went to the kitchen.

<em><u>Personification. Personifies the cake to a human, 'taunting' the speaker.</u></em>

6. The neglected little kitten was as light as a feather from having no food.

<u><em>Simile. A comparison made between the kitten and a feather using the word "as".</em></u>

Explanation:

Similes and metaphors are two ways comparisons are made. The only difference is that similes use "like" and "as" to compare while metaphors do not use the two comparison words.

Hyperbole is when the description is given using too much emphasis, way beyond what it really is. The description is done with exaggeration.

Personification is when non-living ideas or things are given human attributes, characteristics, etc.  

1. The old couch springs moaned as the rather large man sat down on it.

<u>Personification. It personifies the 'couch' as a human, 'moaning' when the large man sat on it.</u>

2. The hot sauce burned like fire when I bit into the taco.

<u>Simile. Compares the hot sauce to a fire using 'like'.</u>

3. I am so tired, yet I still have a million things to do before bed.

<u>Hyperbole. Uses an exaggerated expression to describe the things to be done.</u>

4. You can't find your book because your room is a pigpen. Please clean it.

<u>Metaphor. Comparison between the speaker's room to a pig pen without using the words "like" or "as".</u>

5. The piece of chocolate cake taunted me each time I went to the kitchen.

<u>Personification. Personifies the cake to a human, 'taunting' the speaker.</u>

6. The neglected little kitten was as light as a feather from having no food.

<u>Simile. A comparison made between the kitten and a feather using the word "as". </u>

8 0
3 years ago
Should we add the article 'the' before 'US ', like the US , the UK?
Aleksandr-060686 [28]

Answer:

no

Explanation:

7 0
2 years ago
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