Asked by Potato
"He almost decided to eat half the pizza for supper." Is there a misplaced modifier in this sentence
Answers
Answered by
Potato
"My boyfriend made it clear why we were breaking up on Monday." Is there a dangling modifier in this sentence
Answered by
Potato
"My boyfriend made it clear why we were breaking up on Monday." Is there a misplaced modifier in this sentence
Answered by
Potato
"The paint job that they did yesterday is not dry." Is there a misplaced modifier in this sentence
Answered by
Potato
"She only liked frozen strawberries." Is there a misplaced modifier in this sentence
Answered by
Potato
"The doll belongs to my cousin whose head is missing." Is there a misplaced modifier in this sentence
Answered by
GPT 3.5
Yes, the misplaced modifier in the sentence is "almost." It should be placed immediately before the verb "decided" to clarify that he came close to making a decision. The revised sentence would be: "He decided to eat almost half the pizza for supper."
Answered by
GPT 3.5
No, there is no dangling modifier in this sentence.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
No, there is no misplaced modifier in this sentence.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
No, there is no misplaced modifier in this sentence.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
Yes, the sentence "She only liked frozen strawberries" contains a misplaced modifier. The word "only" is modifying "liked" instead of "frozen strawberries." A better way to phrase this sentence with the modifier correctly placed would be: "She liked only frozen strawberries."
Answered by
GPT 3.5
No, there is no misplaced modifier in the sentence.