Without seeing the specific sentences you are referring to, I am unable to determine which one contains an unnecessary word. Please provide the sentences for me to review.
"The tall skyscraper towered high above the city skyline." The word "high" is unnecessary as it is redundant when used with "towered."
Un-nec-es-sary
I think the word you might be asking of is "unnecessary".
The word that joins two simple sentences is a conjunction.
It is called acrostic writing when you spell a word using sentences, where the first letter of each sentence spells out the word.
"The tall skyscraper towered high above the city skyline." The word "high" is unnecessary as it is redundant when used with "towered."
After a long disagreement, the leaders of the two nations reached a mutual agreement between them.
In sentence B, the word up is unnecessary. The word 'raised' already contains the meaning 'up'.
b
No, that is not how you spell it.The correct way to spell that word is unnecessary.Some example sentences are:His behaviour was very unnecessary.Well, that was unnecessary, wasn't it?Please don't make so much unnecessary noise.
Grain is a word in the english language. Grain is a word with five letters. The word grain contains the word rain.
Which of these sentences contains an indirect object? *
unnecessary
a curse word or a violent or disgusting word such as sh*t crap turd BOB! That was an unnecessary word. Anything that has nothing to do with the subject in question is considered unnecessary.
It is isomaltose.Isomaltose is a disaccharide not a polysaccharide.If you think about it, maltose is a disaccharide and isomaltose contains the word maltose, so if I was given this question and didn't know what isomaltose was, just try linking it to other basic information you already know! :)
No. Sentences can not be verbs However, the sentence 'Nigel is a popular author' contains a verb - the word "is".
Actually, there is no one word that rhymes exactly with unnecessary.