<u>Answer:</u>
“All” is a determiner: Distributive determiners.
<u>Explanation:</u>
“Determiners” are words that come prior to a noun. Like, in the sentence, 'A' dog is barking. Here A is a determiner before the noun 'dog'. All articles, possessive pronouns like "my, your, his, her" and numbers like one, ten are determiners. Distributives like all, half, both are also determiners.
Articles are "a, an and the". When we want to refer to specific noun like Taj Mahal, we use ''the”. It is called definite article. In case of unspecific nouns like apple, mango, table, we use a or an. “An” is used before "vowels" (a, e, i, o, u). This is called indefinite article.
Answer:
Pre-listening tasks include discussion questions, true or false statements, vocabulary work, prediction tasks, and brainstorming the topic.
Explanation:
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Answer:
It makes readers focus on the conclusion and the author's message.
If whipped is not a part of the underlined sentence, we can rule out a verb, leaving "through the massive trees" which is an adjective phase, as it is describing the "massive" trees.