I. Your brother, Chantelle, and I all escaped from the trouble.
II. Your brother, Chantelle. And I all escaped from the trouble.
III. Your brother, Chantelle, and I will escape. From tomorrow.
c. I only
The sentence "Buster has escaped from his dog pen" is in the indicative mood, which is used for statements of fact.
The thief escaped from the policemen. Although the house collapsed, the family escaped injury. Hot water escaped from the pipe and damaged the walls.
Indicative (:
The malefactor escaped from the high-tech prison.
Undaunted by his earlier defeat, Napoleon escaped from exile and returned to France.
The robber escaped from police custody when they stopped at the donut shop.
The sentence "Buster has escaped from his dog pen" is in the indicative mood, which is used for statements of fact.
The prepositional phrase is from the zoo.
The Shadow escaped again, as if in a vapor.
The squirming puppy has escaped my grasp!
The jail inmates escaped and became fugitives.
The thief escaped from the policemen. Although the house collapsed, the family escaped injury. Hot water escaped from the pipe and damaged the walls.
The malefactor escaped from the high-tech prison.
Indicative (:
From the zoo
The monkeys have escaped their enclosure again!
Our condemned celebrity prisoner has escaped- again!