Thi symbol works as a comma/full stop so it is used as a break. ;
comma
comma
A sentence has a group of words that expresses a complete idea, that is a statement, a command, an exclamation, or a question. A sentence must have a subject and a verb in a main clause and may have one or more subordinate clauses.
Noun because it is a idea ( we all kow that a noun is a person,place ,thing or idea!)
A noun is a word used to name a person, animal, place, thing, and abstract idea. So in the above sentence, the word "Birds" is the object, therefore a noun...
If the "phrase" you are quoting is this: "an interesting novel provides good entertainment" it is not a phrase; it is a complete sentence. Therefore it would not be considered something called a "gerund phrase." A phrase is simple a group of words without both a noun or finite verb. In your example, "novel" is the subject, and "provides" the active verb, with "entertainment" the object of the sentence. A gerund is a verb used as a noun, often used as the subject of a sentence. (example: Cooking is my best skill.) In your sentence, "novel" is a word that means a book of fiction. It's a "naming word" a definition of a noun. The word "novel" is one of the English words that have a variety of meanings depending on context. It can be used as an adjective ("She had a novel idea..." meaning an unusual idea, not a book idea lol)
comma
Yes, commas are used around an idea that interrupts a sentence. This interruption is known as an "interjection" and is set off by commas to help clarify the structure of the sentence.
Parentheses or dashes are typically used to set off material that interrupts the flow of a sentence.
The pins used to control interrupts in the 8085 are INTR/INTA, RST5.5, RST6.5, RST7.5, and TRAP.
In the sentence "Who, in your opinion, will win the class election," the commas are used to set off the interrupter "in your opinion." This interrupts the main clause to provide additional information about the context in which the question is being asked.
IRQ 14
DI, EI, RIM, and SIM.
A topic sentence is the main concept of your writing, it can be used anywhere within a paragraph. If used at the start of a paragraph it gives general idea of the writing. If used in the intermediate section of the paragraph it lets you shape an idea and then build upon it. If used at the end of a paragraph it lets you conclude with your final idea.
The 8085 does not have an adjustable priority interrupt schema. You can only turn interrupts off, and mask certain interrupts, such as RST5.5, RST6.5, and RST7.5. However, that said, you can implement a priority schema, of sorts, within these interrupts, including INTR, by using the SIM instruction. You can't change the basic priority but you can disable certain interrupts while others are being serviced, if you so choose.
Special restart instruction used with interrupts
"The use of Wikianswers to have others do their homework was a nefarious idea."
i have no idea actually