To ensure the fairness of the election, it is necessary to scrutinize the voting process closely.
I'm not sure I understand your question. Can you provide more context or rephrase it?
The verb in the sentence is "check." It is an action word that indicates the act of examining or reviewing something for accuracy or errors.
Yes, I understand.
The adverb is carefully because it describes how you crossed the street.Compound adverb
The adverb carefully modifies the verb drives.The adverb very modifies the adverb carefully.
No, the word "scrutinize" is the verb, the noun phrase "the data' should be the direct object of that verb. "Scrutinize the data." is correct. Note: The sentence is an imperative sentence, the subject is implied, "You scrutinize the data." The term "of the data" is a prepositional phrase. The preposition "of" indicates a relationship between the object of the preposition, "data" and something else in the sentence but nothing else is given in the sentence.
Scrutinize the list so you can remember the terms. She will scrutinize your report, so make sure you don't have any errors.
The word 'scrutinize' is a verb meaning to closely examine; to examine in detail with careful or critical attention.Example sentences:During any kind of subjective research you must scrutinize your sources.A good machinist will scrutinize his work to catch imperfections.They are so picky. They scrutinize everything.
The word 'scrutinize' is a verb meaning to closely examine.Example sentences:A good machinist will scrutinize his work to catch imperfections.They are so picky. They scrutinize everything."From now on, I would need to scrutinize the mistakes I find in my essays and fix them and learn from them."
He came under intense scrutiny when he applied for the position. Her scrutiny of the data was amazing.
Credential is usually plural: "before giving a teaching position, the university will scrutinize your credentials."
She stared critically at his work. He spoke critically, then moved on to scrutinize the next team.
Preserved is an action done to something. For example, "She preserved her father's picture carefully."
Her tactics were impressive. This sentence works because the word means to carefully plan something with a specific, desirable end.
The comprehensive data was something beyond me, i couldn't understand it at all.
Carefully is the adverb in the sentence, "Bill studied the text very carefully."
A declarative sentence refers to something that has been made known or explained. The question then follows, such as 'I have explained, do you understand?