yes I'll ask if no response start ABC
What is the simple predicate of this sentence The lifeguard dashed into the water to save the drowning child? The answer is Dashed.
What is the simple predicate of this sentence The lifeguard dashed into the water to save the drowning child? The answer is Dashed.
drowning?
Suffocating under water (drowning)
The simple predicate in the sentence "The lifeguard dashed into the water to save the drowning child" is "dashed." It represents the main action that the subject, "the lifeguard," is performing.
It most likely means you or your friend is in distress or it could mean your friend is suffering Nearly all dreams refer to the dreamer rather than to the person whose image is seen in the dream. In this example, the drowning friend represents the dreamer's own feeling of being overwhelmed. This might refer to being "flooded with work" or perhaps to a mortgage that is "under water," or even "drowning in sorrow."
A red-orange flame on the water (Victoria's Hair). Or her hallucination of Edward.
Yes, aquaphobia is the fear of water and drowning
No, Antarctica is a continent.
There are two verbs in this sentence: dashed, and save. The phrase "to save the drowning child" is a prepositional phrase, and therefore the primary action verb in this sentence is dashed.
If a singer witnesses a child drowning, they should immediately call for help by alerting others nearby or calling emergency services. It is important to not enter the water themselves unless they are trained in water rescue, as this could put both the singer and the child in further danger. The singer should try to keep the child in sight and provide any assistance they can from a safe distance until help arrives.
When she was little she had a panic attack in a swimming pool and felt as if she was drowning and being dragged under.