The correct answer is adjectival clause.
An adjectival clause is a dependent clause that works to describe a noun in a sentence. It is usually made of a group of words instead of one word only. All the words work together to modify the noun or pronoun.
A dependent clause contains a subject and a verb but it's not a complete sentence and it can not stand alone.
Adjectival clauses begin with a relative pronoun that connects them to the word they describe. The relative pronouns are: that, where, then, who, which, why etc.
In the clause<em> who are compassionate</em>, the<em> who</em> is the relative pronoun. The clause refers and modifies the noun appearing before in the sentence.
Answer: D
Explanation: hope this helps!
Well, but he did have some hardships.
Let's look at all the options:
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A:(It does not allow audience interaction.)ion
This is false. The speaker has a complete control over when to stop the presentation, so if the audience has some question, the speaker can stop the presentation
B:(It requires special hardware, such as a computer and speakers.)
This is the correct answer! Setting up the hardware and software often takes a long time and delays the start of the presentation
C:(Viewers have no control over the sequence of the presentation.)
This might be true, but viewers have no control over any presentation - only the presenter has ! (the presenter can involve the viewers thought)
D:(It cannot reach a large audience.)
This is false - a multimedia presentation can typically reach a wider audience than a non-multimedia one!
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