The correct answer is Mostly the ending.
A sentence fragment is a group of words that looks like a sentence. But it is not a complete sentence because there is usually a subject or a verb missing. A fragment can nor stand on its own. An independent clause ( containing a subject and and a verb) is needed for a fragment to become a sentence.
In <em>Mostly the ending</em> there is no verb, so this is not a sentence. It can not stand on its own because it has no meaning separately. All of the other examples are sentences because they have both a subject (He, Many people, It) and verbs (wrote, is, like).
<span>Nick Carraway is the first-person narrator, who's always on the outside looking in. He says at the beginning that he's "inclined to reserve all judgements,", so he's almost a non-existent narrator while actually being there to observe everyone's lives around him. </span>
Answer:
He teaches them, though each can be overcome alone, they are invincible combined.
Explanation:
Having bound a bundle of sticks together (or in other accounts either spears or arrows), he asks his sons to break them. When they fail, he undoes the bundle and either breaks each stick singly or gets his sons to do so. In the same way he teaches them, though each can be overcome alone, they are invincible combined.
Hope this helps!
“He would at once become unmanageable, and of no value to his master.”
And
“It would make him discontented and unhappy.”