The most effective way to combine sentences (1) and (2) is definitely :William Shakespeare was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, a town in England. This is the only sentence which both represents correct grammar and semantic structures. This sentence contains a complection of a direct object of the sentence as they bring one sense and can substitude each other. The structure of this sentence clearly shows that Stratford-upon-Avon is a a town in England that is totally correct. The second option lacks a comma, the next one contains improper use of participle phrase and the last one contains extra conjuction.
I believe it is option A. He loved a beautiful woman who has died.
Answer: A
Explanation: a clause, typically introduced by a conjunction, that forms part of and is dependent on a main clause (e.g., “when it rang” in “she answered the phone when it rang”).
Answer:
A- “to relate an abstract concept to something real”
Explanation:
The point of this passage is definitely not for the sake of putting in food readers may like. The point is to put in an abstract concept-love- and make a metaphor(comparing it) to real life things to help the reader visualize what the author is trying to say better.
The Last name and then the first