A. Contestant.
contestantcontestant
As tall as she. In a sentence, you use 'I am as tall as she'. After the 'she', there is actually an 'is'. However, it is redundant so you do not add it into a sentence. So the sentence 'I am as tall as she' is actually 'I am as tall as she is', but only without the 'is'.
Emily has many friends
The pattern of a question sentence can take many forms but most often includes a word indicating that it is an inquiry, such as who, what, when, where, why, can, may, or how. Examples:Who is the tallest in the class?Your appointment is on Tuesday at what time?When I get to the park, where will I find you?If you don't like squash, why do you make it?
there are 2 syllables in tallest. tall-est
contestantcontestant
b
The complete subject is "the tallest contestant."
The simple subject is "contestant."The word which stands for the 'doer' in the sentence without any modifiers or complements is the simple subject. In the sentence mentioned by you, "The tallest contestant won the prize", the word contestant is the simple subject and the words tallest contestant form a noun phrase representing the complete subject.
The tallest contestant won the prize.' In the preceding sentence, the simple subject is 'contestant.' The verb is 'won,' and the direct object is 'prize.'
b
B
Getting an answer as to the tallest contestant is proving to be real tough. The tallest *winner* seems to be Miss Dominican Repulic in 2003, Amelia Vega. Everything I've read says she's 6'1" or 185 cm.
sister
The primary thought of the sentence is that Emily (or your sister) has many friends. The name Emily and the tallest phrase are both "appositives" of your sister.
When comparing two things use taller. Paul is the taller of the two.
C. Emily has many friends