Asked by ok
We are going on a vacation.
We must make reservations for our flights and hotels.
Which sentence combines these two sentences together using an adverbial clause while keeping the original meaning of the two sentences?
(1 point)
Responses
Before we go on vacation, we must make reservations for our fights and hotels.
Before we go on vacation, we must make reservations for our fights and hotels.
We are going on a vacation, so we must make reservations for our flights and hotels.
We are going on a vacation, so we must make reservations for our flights and hotels.
So we can make reservations for our flights and hotels, we need to go on vacation.
So we can make reservations for our flights and hotels, we need to go on vacation.
Making reservations for our flights and hotels must be done before we can leave on vacation.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
"Before we go on vacation, we must make reservations for our flights and hotels."
"Before we go on vacation" is an adverbial clause of time and preserves the original meaning.
"Before we go on vacation" is an adverbial clause of time and preserves the original meaning.
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