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.
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'.
at least two clauses; one clause
it 's c
Mary was dominant among Jesus' disciples.
Sentences must have at least one clause, which usually contains at least a subject noun and a finite verb.
The interview contains run-on sentences and "filler" words while the preface uses complete sentences.
Well, the usual sentence classifications are simple sentences, compound sentences, complex sentences, and compound-complex sentences. Simple sentences are the most basic kind, they consist of one independent clause. Compound sentences contain two independent clauses. Complex sentences contain an independent clause and a dependent clause. Compound-complex sentences contain at least two independent clauses and one dependent clause.
Actually, there is no one word that rhymes exactly with unnecessary.
In English grammar, when a sentence only contains a verb, the subject is often understood to be "you" or "one" depending on the context. These types of sentences are known as imperative sentences and give orders, instructions, or commands.
The interview contains run-on sentences and "filler" words while the preface uses complete sentences in an unemotional way.