Answer:
Get up, wake (him) up, go off, turned (it) off, went back, come on, show up, put up with, give up, came across, found out, checking out, made up, look for, going over, come up with, called (him) up, called her back ,talk about, counting on
Explanation:
Hope this helps :)
It is important to remember that commas are not merely pauses within a sentence, a mistake that is often made and which leads to writing issues. A comma is also a punctuation mark that is used to separate clauses, or ideas and that helps connect them without having to use periods all the time. Commas, according to rules, must be used in the following cases: before using coordinating conjunctions, such as but, and or for, after dependent clauses that begin a sentence, to separate series within a sentence, when you are going to use a clause that clarifies a word, or an idea before it, after introductory adverbs, such as Finally, before a quotation, when setting dates (day, month, year), when using the city-state combinations, after a freestanding word, like no, when you address something or someone directly in a text, between adjectives that modify a noun, among others. In this case, the correct answer is A, because the commas separate the main subject, Mother, the dependent clause in the middle, the main idea, which is that the subject works late and then in between the main idea and its dependent clause, which is that they eat supper at 8 because the mother works late.
I believe the correct answer: is it suggests that one
opponent is much smaller than the other.
In this excerpt from the newspaper "A David and
Goliath Battle Rages Over Sunshine Park", the mentioning the David and
Goliath suggest that one of the opponents in much smaller than the other. This
Biblical parallel alludes that even If regarded as the “small opponent”, Chelsea
Spree has an opportunity to win, just as David had.
Are you like running away from someone or something....anyway id say C for no reason, just seemed funny