Forming a compound subject
A compound subject refers to a sentence that talks about two or more subjects. The two subjects are combined with a conjunction such as (and, or, neither).
By forming a compound subject the two sentences:"snowshoeing is a popular activity in grand lake. snowmobiling is also a popular activity in grand lake" can be combined into one sentence as follows:
"Snowshoeing and snowmobiling are popular activities in grand land"
This new sentence now contains a compound subject (both snowshoeing and snowmobiling) which is separated by the conjunction "and".
Answer: Author Madeleine L'Engle died in September, 2007, at a nursing home in Litchfield, Connecticut leaving behind a legacy of more than sixty works for
children and adult
Explanation:
Answer:
(a) Jason brought three sandwiches for himself.
Explanation:
himself is a reflexive pronoun, and it's the only one that uses the reflexive pronouns correctly and is grammatically correct.