Answer: wants to stop the boys from having fun at his expense
Explanation: The narrator hated that the other boys were so absorbed and interested in his proceedings with the shop girl. The narrator wished that the boys were in Jericho. The narrator told the shop girl that he will put the other glove on in the street, indicating that he wants to leave her shop to escape those boys, which will stop them from having fun at his expense.
I hope that this helps.
<span>This is of course somewhat of a subjective question, but one piece of advice you could give to this group would be to delegate some tasks of organization to other people. </span>
Answer:
Some actors work as a waiter until their big break.
Explanation:
The sentence that contains an inappropriate shift in person is the last one. Instead of <em>a waiter,</em> we should say <em>waiters </em>(<em>Some actors work as waiters</em>...). <em>Actors </em>is a plural noun and it should be followed by a plural noun. Another thing that confirms this is the use of the plural possessive pronoun <em>their</em>.
The rest of the sentences are correct. In the first sentence, there is no dilemma. In the second sentence, we have the phrase <em>many people</em>, which requires a plural verb and plural possessive pronoun. These conditions are fulfilled. The third sentence is a bit tricky because of the correlative conjunction <em>neither... nor.</em> The verb and possessive pronoun should be in the singular form in this case (as <em>Dave</em> is a singular noun), and they are, which makes this sentence correct.
This is why the fourth option is the correct answer.
John's, Mark's, baker's, St. Paul's, Bill's, Frank's, Abby's, and dentist's. A possessive noun shows ownership.