English, asked by drshivavenkatesh, 7 months ago

Rearrange them to form meaningful sentences:
(d) research/the/has/in-depth/outcome/and/everyone of studies/intensive/startled

Answers

Answered by kundurugnansundar200
0

Answer:

ANSWER

Following is the usual order of words in an English sentence: Subject of the sentence, followed by verb, which is followed by object of the sentence. Adjective usually precedes the noun (unless it is used predicatively).

The words which can be subject / object of a sentence are nouns/ pronouns. In the given set of jumbled words, the nouns are 'sound' and 'disc'.

The main verb is 'recorded'. The presence of auxiliary verbs viz. 'has' and 'been' suggests that the complete verb is: 'Has been recorded'. The answer to the question: 'What has been recorded?' is 'sound'.

The word, 'that' is a demonstrative adjective, which should precede the noun it modifies. The answer to the question, 'Where has the sound been recorded?' is: 'On that disc', which is an adverbial phrase So, the possible sentence is: 'Sound has been recorded on the disc'. Hence, option B is correct.

Option A: This sentence is not grammatically correct as a determiner (a/the) or an adjective is required before the noun, 'disc'. This is missing.

Options C & D: In these options, the word, 'recorded' is used as an adjective, which modifies the noun, 'sound'. This is acceptable. However, the main verb is missing. The auxiliary verbs 'has been', by themselves, do not convey any meaning. An acceptable modification of option C is: 'Recorded sound has been stored on that disc'.

Further, in option D, the adverbial phrase (on that disc), is placed in the beginning. This is incorrect because an adverb is usually placed close to the word that it modifies. Hence, options C & D are incorrect.

Answered by josanangad17
1

Answer:

thanku love you..................

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