. Once Claudio believed Hero had done wrong, he wanted to badly hurt her.
Give me your hand,"she said".
Correctly is an adverb
No. Substitute "better" for "gooder." The names of the girls must be capitalized, people's names are proper nouns. Adjective good, comparative better, superlative best.
Periods can go a lot of places, but mainly at the end of a statement. Ex: I went to the mall to shop for new clothes. (This is called a declarative sentence) Question marks go at the end of sentences as well. Ex: Where did that paper go? (This is called an interrogatory sentence) Another common type of punctuation is the exclamation point or mark, which always appear at the end of a sentence. Ex: That ice cream was splendid! (This is known as an exclamatory sentence) Hope this helped!
Do you mean a "dependent clause"?In English grammar, it is a portion of a sentence that has a subject and a predicate but cannot stand on its own as a sentence.For example, "The man who commited the crime was arrested by the police.""Who committed the crime" is a dependent clause. It acts as a modifier of the word "man.""The man was arrested because he committed a crime." Here "because he committed a crime" is another dependent clause.
The word "looked" is a correctly used modifier in the sentence.
The sentence "She quickly ran to the store to buy some groceries" contains a correctly used modifier in italic.
No, the modifier is misplaced in this sentence. It should be revised to: "Edging her way excitedly through the crowd, she found the noise to be deafening." This places the modifier next to the noun it is intended to modify.
He spoke sharply to his sister
Yes, the modifier in this sentence correctly located in "Spilling a drink onto the customers head the waitress was horrified."
Nono
Yes, the modifier is used correctly. "He spoke sharply to his sister" would be the correct way to write the sentence.
No, the sentence does not have a misplaced modifier. The phrase "that Sarah had read" correctly describes the small book.
No, the modifier in this sentence is incorrectly located. It should be revised to: "The broken vase, lying in pieces on the floor, was irreparable."
no...
yes
No, the modifier "edging her way excitedly through the crowd" should be placed immediately next to the word it is modifying, which is likely the subject of the sentence. By moving the modifier closer to the subject, the sentence will be clearer and more coherent.