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Original Question
Which sentence demonstrates correct subject-verb agreement? A. Most of the students attend the pep rally. B. Most of the school...Asked by i love tristen<3
Which sentence demonstrates correct subject-verb agreement?(1 point)
Responses
Most of the school attend the pep rally.
Most of the school attend the pep rally.
Most of the students attend the pep rally.
Most of the students attend the pep rally.
Most of the teachers attends the pep rally.
Most of the teachers attends the pep rally.
Most of the teams attends the pep rally.
Most of the teams attends the pep rally.
Responses
Most of the school attend the pep rally.
Most of the school attend the pep rally.
Most of the students attend the pep rally.
Most of the students attend the pep rally.
Most of the teachers attends the pep rally.
Most of the teachers attends the pep rally.
Most of the teams attends the pep rally.
Most of the teams attends the pep rally.
Answers
Answered by
i love tristen<3
a b c d
Answered by
i love tristen<3
Use the sentence to answer the question.
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old daughter for the night.
Which version of the sentence corrects the error in the compound adjective?
(1 point)
Responses
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old-daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old-daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two-year-old daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two-year-old daughter for the night.
Millie might-not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old daughter for the night.
Millie might-not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play to-night because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old daughter for the night.
Which version of the sentence corrects the error in the compound adjective?
(1 point)
Responses
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old-daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old-daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two-year-old daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two-year-old daughter for the night.
Millie might-not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old daughter for the night.
Millie might-not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old daughter for the night.
Millie might not be able to attend the play to-night because she still has to find someone to watch her two year old daughter for the night.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The sentence that demonstrates correct subject-verb agreement is:
**Most of the students attend the pep rally.**
In this sentence, "students" is plural, so it correctly agrees with the plural verb "attend."
**Most of the students attend the pep rally.**
In this sentence, "students" is plural, so it correctly agrees with the plural verb "attend."
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct answer is:
**b) Most of the students attend the pep rally.**
This sentence uses the plural noun "students," which correctly agrees with the plural verb "attend."
**b) Most of the students attend the pep rally.**
This sentence uses the plural noun "students," which correctly agrees with the plural verb "attend."
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct version of the sentence that corrects the error in the compound adjective is:
**Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two-year-old daughter for the night.**
In this sentence, "two-year-old" is properly hyphenated as a compound adjective to describe "daughter."
**Millie might not be able to attend the play tonight because she still has to find someone to watch her two-year-old daughter for the night.**
In this sentence, "two-year-old" is properly hyphenated as a compound adjective to describe "daughter."