Because she was really Stapleton's wife
In the book "The Hound of the Baskervilles" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Jack Stapleton is actually Miss Beryl Stapleton's husband. Allegedly though, she is Jack's sister.
No- Carter's sister is Ruth Stapleton.
No, they are not sisters. Jean Stapleton is not related to actress Maureen Stapleton. Stapleton is Jean's mother's maiden name. Jean Stapleton has relatives in show business, including actress cousin Betty Jane Watson.
[object Object]
He needs to pretend he is single in order to convince Laura Lyons and Sir Henry that he and his wife are free agents.
The only name given is Selden, which is his last name. We do know that Mrs. Eliza Barrymore is his sister, but that's about it.
[object Object]
It can be the subject, or it can be the object. In a typical sentence, the subject is who or what performed the action. The object is who or what received the action. For example: The boy hugged his sister. Boy is the subject (he did the action), and sister is the object (she received it).
his sister = sa soeur. In French, the pronoun refers to the object of the sentence.
If it was "please don't bother my sister and ___."It would be me, but if it was "My sister and ___ are going to the movies," it would be I.
Mangan's sister
The term 'my sister' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun (sister) that functions as a unit in a sentence.The noun phrase 'my sister' is made up of the common noun 'sister' modified by the pronoun 'my'.The pronoun 'my' is a possessive adjective, a word that takes the place of the noun for the person speaking, indicating possession of the noun that follows.A noun phrase will function as the subject of a sentence or a clause or the object of a verb or a preposition.Example functions:My sister made the cake. (subject of the sentence)The cake that my sister made is for the bake sale. (subject of the relative clause)I will call my sister to pick us up. (direct object of the verb 'will call')I sent my sister an email. (indirect object of the verb 'sent')I'm going shopping with my sister. (object of the preposition 'with')