Answer: The correct answer is [B]: "She."
<u>Explanation</u>:
Note: "She/he/'name of one person, place, or thing'); or "it" —
are all examples of a "third person, singular, pronoun."
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Note: Let us examine the answer choices:
Choice [A]: "We" —is a first-person plural noun; so is: "Johnny and I (me)"; would function as "we". → Rule out.
Choice [B]: "She"—makes sense—{Note: "She/he/'name of one person, place, or thing'); or "it" —are all examples of a "third person, singular" pronoun.]. → sounds promising!
Choice [C]: "They"—is a "third-person plural" pronoun—[Note: "They, "You all"; "Jonathan and Susan"; "The monkeys"; "The monkeys, the rabbits, and the flamingoes" — are all examples of a "third person, plural" pronoun.]" → Rule out.
Choice [D]: "Me"—is a "first-person singular" pronoun.
[Note: " I , and "me"—are examples of pronouns.] → Rule out.
We are left with the correct answer:
Answer Choice [B]: "She" ;
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Hope this answer is helpful. Best wishes!
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Answer:
Lol sure But you got banlance your apatype
Explanation:
I would say this is a "noun phrase" because you could say... In the experiment the stimulants caused the plants to grow.
<h2>
Answer:</h2><h2> Just read what they are asking u to do that's all and I had this one to when I was in school</h2>
Answer and Explanation:
<em>Two vast and trunkless legs of stone</em>
<em>Stand in the desert . . . Near them, on the sand,</em>
<em>Half sunk, a shattered visage lies,</em>
<em />
<u>Percy Shelley's "Ozymandias" carries a message that existence and power are temporary.</u> In the excerpt above, only the legs remained of what once was a colossal statue of an ancient king. The power that king once had is now gone, along with his cities, subjects, and fortune.
<em>Round the decay</em>
<em>Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare</em>
<em>The lone and level sands stretch far away.</em>
<em />
There is nothing left to remind us of the greatness that king once had except for the statue's remains. <u>This is a second message the poem conveys. Art, unlike life itself, is permanent.</u> The artistic representation of what that king once was is the only memory, able to "survive, stamped on these lifeless things."