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rather than procrastinate, just do it.
"its" is a possessive pronoun when something belongs to 'it'. for example: "this is my action figure. this is its hat" "is" is a passive verb: commenting on existence rather than action. For example: " it is hot" or "it is plastic"
The sentence "Are you certain of that?" has no direct object. The only verb is "are", and it is a linking verb rather than an action verb, so "certain" is a predicate adjective.
you should buy this car rather than that one.
An open sentence that contains the symbol greater than? Ans: y2 + 5y > 12 ( y is real) is one such open sentence.
No, the sentence "The book was returned to the library yesterday" is in passive voice because the subject (the book) is receiving the action (being returned) rather than performing the action.
I would rather eat steak than oysters. She would rather run than walk. They would rather play games than do homework.
Schools often use mass discipline to reinforce expectations of behavior rather than discern a wise and prudent plan of action for an individual.
Socrates demonstrates that he is the master of his destiny by drinking the hemlock himself. This made his death a voluntary action rather than a sentence that was carried out.
The subject in a sentence is the person, place, thing, or idea that is doing or being something. To find the subject, ask "who" or "what" is performing the action in the sentence. The subject is usually located at the beginning of a simple sentence.
decentralists
A phrase, rather than a sentence, it means: scullery maid