Answer:
A magician walked up to me. "What do you have in your hand?", I asked him. "A deck of cards. Want to see a trick?" I cautiously agreed. He began shuffling and told me to pull a card. I pulled a heart of 3. He shuffled again and put up my card! "Is this the card you pulled?" "It is! That is mine!" I was confused, yet amazed. "Do you get it?", he asked, "no, I don't understand...at all."
Explanation:
Its a little more than 5 sentences. Hope thats okay!
Answer:
Adverb clause.
Explanation:
<em>The phrase in the given statement in brackets exemplifies an adverb clause as it is acting as a modifier to the principal clause. An adverb clause is the group of words functioning as an adverb(modifier) in the sentence and describes the condition in which the action is performed or will be performed. Similar to this sentence, as here "if we arrive by 8 a.m." (adverb clause)beginning with the subordinating conjunction "if", describes that "Our coach will be happy".</em> Thus, the second option best complements the purpose of the clause.
Answer: Rice was not planted by them.
She is praying to a deity to remove all traces of her womanhood so that she can be filled with cruelty and carry out the bloody tasks necessary to bring her husband to power
Answer:
Statement 1: There are three Stooges: Moe, the leader; Larry, the follower; and Curly, the fool.
Explanation:
In the given four sentences, the colon is used in all cases in listing the different items/ persons/ lists. This is right and valid.
Now, to put a semi-colon in a sentence, there is a further need for that particular punctuation mark. Semi-colons are used in between the items in the same sentence and if the items have a comma in between. This way, there will also be lesser use of the comma.
Thus, the sentence that needs a semi-colon in it is statement 1.
The final sentence will be written as-
<u><em>There are three Stooges: Moe, the leader; Larry, the follower; and Curly, the fool.</em></u>