We can see here the question is incomplete. I have provided the complete passage and answer below:
- Should read "these, having"
<h3>What is a sentence?</h3>
A sentence is defined as a group of words that make up a complete thought. It usually have a subject and a predicate.
The complete part of the given question is seen below:
What is wrong with the italic underlined words?
Not many of us would want to do without our telephone but there are times when the phone is a source of anxiety. For example, I
might have been walking up to my front door. When the phone rang. I struggled to find my key, to unlock the door, and getting to
the phone quickly. The phone would not stop ringing the instant I picked up the receiver, then I wondered if I missed the call that
would have made me an millionaire or introduced me to the love of my life. Another time, I may have call in sick to work with a
phony excuse. All day long, you were afraid to leave the house in case the boss calls back. And asked if I were feeling well enough
to go out after work yesterday. In addition I worried that I might have accidentally pick up the phone and said in a cheerful voice,
“Hello, completely forgetting to use my fake cough. <em>In cases like these having a telephone is more of a curse than a blessing.</em>
- change "having" to "have"
- should read "these, having"
We can actually deduce here that in the given question above, the part of the italicized sentence that is wrong is: <em>these having </em>
So, it should read <em>"these, having" </em>- the comma between these and having corrects it.
Learn more about sentence on brainly.com/question/552895
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