The only thing you need to do to identify the adverbial phrase in the sentence is to find an adverb or a characteristic which contains an adverb. As you can see, here is a characteristic made up by an adverb which I have highlighted: <span>The studious Andrea will go to the store after she finishes her homework. So, the correct answer is definitely ''</span><span>The studious Andrea''.</span>
No. A citation simply gives credit to the source you are obtaining the information from. For example if someone cited "[quote]," then there should be an in-text parenthetical citation. In MLA format, this is given as the last name of the author and page number surrounded by parentheses. For example, "Quote quote quote" (Brains 1).
Answer:
A. deferential
Explanation:
<em>He was an important dignitary and was, thus, given </em><u><em>deferential </em></u><em>treatment.</em>
option a. best completes the sentence. to be deferential is to be respectful. so this would mean, the "important dignitary" was treated with respect.