This sentence has a compound subject.
A compound subject contains more than one subject - as you can see here, there are two subjects: Jason AND Raci, which makes this subject a compound one (made of at least 2 entities). Nothing else is compound in this sentence.
Its not a prepostional phrase because to be one you have to start with a prepostional. So the the answer is B.
Answer:
He contrasts the adult's view of the situation with the children's view.
Explanation:
- In the sentence "Any of us could be the winner", there is two pronouns which are <em>any</em> and <em>us. </em>
- The word "us" is a personal pronoun, more precisely a personal objective one. Personal pronouns are used to replace a noun within the sentence or clause. They can be either subjective when the subject of a sentence is the person or thing that fulfills the action (I, he, she, it, they, we, and you) or objective when they indicate the recipient of an action or motion and when they come after verbs and prepositions (me, her, him, it, you, them, and us).
- On the other hand, the word "any" in this sentence acts as an indefinite pronoun since it does not refer to any specific person, thing or amount. It is vague and "not definite". Moreover, such word can also act as a determiner when used before nouns:
"<em>I dont have any sugar."</em>
Answer: It builds up tension
Explanation:
For example, if there is a murder mystery, the sequence of events might be interviewing each suspect. As the interviewer checks people off one by one, it builds up the tension until the mystery is solved, which would be the resolution.