It would be better to say, 'When the car hit the tree the impact made a terrible noise,' so that the reader isn't left in any doubt whether it was the car or the tree that made the terrible noise.
(It is actually neither one, but the impact that makes the noise.)
The correct answer is: When the car hit a tree, it made a terrible noise. Since the object is to find the sentence with vague pronouns, it could refer to either the tree or car. It does not specify which antecedent it refers to. * This is a poor example of a vague (unclear) pronoun because there is no noun antecedent. What is making the noise is the collision, not the tree or the car. What is making the noise is "the car hitting the tree" which is not in the sentence.
The correct sentence is - The boys made a lot of noise
There are no vague (indefinite) pronouns in the sentence. There is only one pronoun in the sentence, it, which is a personal pronoun, representing the noun antecedent car.
Bill has to be made accordingly. yes that is a sentence.
The phrase "made you" can occur in a grammatically correct sentence, yes. We'd have to see the entire sentence to know for sure.
In the sentence "Billy made a rude noise in class," there is one adjective, which is "rude." Adjectives are words that modify or describe nouns, and in this case, "rude" describes the type of noise Billy made.
Yes :)
That is the correct spelling of "croaked" (made a frog noise, or slang for died).
The riots were terrible, but the ensuing police response made things even worse.
Together with the dulcet tones of Jacqui, they made a really sweet noise.
That is the correct spelling of "screeched" (made a high-pitched wail or animal sound).
Exactly as you wrote it: The members of the Board made a decision. Capitalizing "Members" may also be acceptable