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underline the adverbs & adjectives. people usually survive the bite of …

Question

underline the adverbs & adjectives.
people usually survive the bite of a venomous snake if they immediately seek medical attention.
which word could be found on this page of a dictionary?
image: dictionary page with \vacuum\ and \van\ visible, options: venture, vapor, valet
underline and correct the words that should be capitalized.
my grandparents live next door to uncle john in cheyenne, wyoming.
fix the sentence. is it a fragment or a run-on?
when is lunch i’m really hungry?
which words have a prefix that means not?
none about
atypical illustration
under unlit
important disagree
discussion nonsmoker
highlight the part of the sentence that helps you find the meaning of the underlined words.
she tried to wring out her bathing suit by twisting it until all the water fell to the ground.

Explanation:

Response
1. Underline the ADVERBS & ADJECTIVES
  • Adverbs: usually, immediately
  • Adjectives: venomous, medical
2. Which word could be found on this page of a dictionary?

Dictionaries arrange words alphabetically. The given words are between "vacuum" and "van". Let’s check the alphabetical order:

  • "vacuum" (starts with "v", followed by "a", "c"...)
  • "vapor" (starts with "v", "a", "p"...)
  • "valet" (starts with "v", "a", "l"...)
  • "venture" (starts with "v", "e"...)
  • "van" (starts with "v", "a", "n"...)

Alphabetical order: vacuumvaporvaletvanventure? No, correct order: "vacuum" (V-A-C), "vapor" (V-A-P), "valet" (V-A-L) comes before "van" (V-A-N)? Wait, no—"valet" is V-A-L-E-T, "van" is V-A-N. So "valet" (L) comes before "van" (N). Wait, the page has "vacuum" and "van" as the top/bottom. So words between them must start with V-A- (after "vacuum" (V-A-C) and before "van" (V-A-N)). Wait, "vacuum" is V-A-C-U-U-M, "van" is V-A-N. So words between them should have V-A- (C < letter < N). Let’s check:

  • "vapor": V-A-P (P is after C, before N? C (3), P (16), N (14)—no, P is after N. Oops, mistake. Wait, "vacuum" (V-A-C) and "van" (V-A-N). So the middle letters: after "vacuum" (C), before "van" (N). So letters between C and N: D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M. Wait, no—"vacuum" is spelled V-A-C-U-U-M. So the third letter is C. "van" is V-A-N (third letter N). So words between them must have third letter between C and N. Let’s check the options:
  • "venture": V-E-N-T-U-R-E (second letter E, so no)
  • "vapor": V-A-P-O-R (third letter P, which is after N—no)
  • "valet": V-A-L-E-T (third letter L, which is between C and N—yes! Because C (3) < L (12) < N (14). So "valet" is between "vacuum" (C) and "van" (N). Wait, no—"vacuum" is V-A-C..., "valet" is V-A-L..., "van" is V-A-N... So alphabetical order: V-A-C (vacuum) → V-A-L (valet) → V-A-N (van). Yes! So "valet" is between them. Wait, but "vapor" is V-A-P, which is after V-A-N (since P > N). So the correct word is valet.
3. Underline and correct the words that should be capitalized
  • "my" → My (beginning of sentence)
  • "grandparents" → no (common noun)
  • "uncle john" → Uncle John (proper noun: title + name)
  • "cheyenne, wyoming" → Cheyenne, Wyoming (proper noun: city + state)

Corrected sentence: My grandparents live next door to Uncle John in Cheyenne, Wyoming.

4. Fix the sentence. Is it a fragment or a run-on?

Original: When is lunch I’m really hungry?
This is a run-on sentence (two independent clauses joined without punctuation).

Fix: Add a question mark after "lunch" and a period, or use a comma + conjunction. But since it’s a question, better: When is lunch? I’m really hungry.

5. Which words have a prefix that means "not"?

Prefixes meaning "not": a-, un-, dis-, non-.

  • atypical: prefix a- (not typical)
  • unlit: prefix un- (not lit)
  • disagree: prefix dis- (not agree)
  • nonsmoker: prefix non- (not a smoker)

So the words are: atypical, unlit, disagree, nonsmoker.

6. Highlight the part of the sentence that helps find the meaning of "wring out"

Sentence: She tried to wring out her bathing suit by twisting it until all the water fell to the ground.

The context clue is: by twisting it until all the water fell to the ground (explains "wring out" means twisting to remove water).

Final Answers (Key Parts):
  1. Adverbs: usually, immediately; Adjectives: venomous, medical
  2. Word: valet
  3. Corrected: My grandparents live next door to Uncle John in Cheyenne, Wyoming
  4. Fixed: *…

Answer:

1. Underline the ADVERBS & ADJECTIVES
  • Adverbs: usually, immediately
  • Adjectives: venomous, medical
2. Which word could be found on this page of a dictionary?

Dictionaries arrange words alphabetically. The given words are between "vacuum" and "van". Let’s check the alphabetical order:

  • "vacuum" (starts with "v", followed by "a", "c"...)
  • "vapor" (starts with "v", "a", "p"...)
  • "valet" (starts with "v", "a", "l"...)
  • "venture" (starts with "v", "e"...)
  • "van" (starts with "v", "a", "n"...)

Alphabetical order: vacuumvaporvaletvanventure? No, correct order: "vacuum" (V-A-C), "vapor" (V-A-P), "valet" (V-A-L) comes before "van" (V-A-N)? Wait, no—"valet" is V-A-L-E-T, "van" is V-A-N. So "valet" (L) comes before "van" (N). Wait, the page has "vacuum" and "van" as the top/bottom. So words between them must start with V-A- (after "vacuum" (V-A-C) and before "van" (V-A-N)). Wait, "vacuum" is V-A-C-U-U-M, "van" is V-A-N. So words between them should have V-A- (C < letter < N). Let’s check:

  • "vapor": V-A-P (P is after C, before N? C (3), P (16), N (14)—no, P is after N. Oops, mistake. Wait, "vacuum" (V-A-C) and "van" (V-A-N). So the middle letters: after "vacuum" (C), before "van" (N). So letters between C and N: D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M. Wait, no—"vacuum" is spelled V-A-C-U-U-M. So the third letter is C. "van" is V-A-N (third letter N). So words between them must have third letter between C and N. Let’s check the options:
  • "venture": V-E-N-T-U-R-E (second letter E, so no)
  • "vapor": V-A-P-O-R (third letter P, which is after N—no)
  • "valet": V-A-L-E-T (third letter L, which is between C and N—yes! Because C (3) < L (12) < N (14). So "valet" is between "vacuum" (C) and "van" (N). Wait, no—"vacuum" is V-A-C..., "valet" is V-A-L..., "van" is V-A-N... So alphabetical order: V-A-C (vacuum) → V-A-L (valet) → V-A-N (van). Yes! So "valet" is between them. Wait, but "vapor" is V-A-P, which is after V-A-N (since P > N). So the correct word is valet.
3. Underline and correct the words that should be capitalized
  • "my" → My (beginning of sentence)
  • "grandparents" → no (common noun)
  • "uncle john" → Uncle John (proper noun: title + name)
  • "cheyenne, wyoming" → Cheyenne, Wyoming (proper noun: city + state)

Corrected sentence: My grandparents live next door to Uncle John in Cheyenne, Wyoming.

4. Fix the sentence. Is it a fragment or a run-on?

Original: When is lunch I’m really hungry?
This is a run-on sentence (two independent clauses joined without punctuation).

Fix: Add a question mark after "lunch" and a period, or use a comma + conjunction. But since it’s a question, better: When is lunch? I’m really hungry.

5. Which words have a prefix that means "not"?

Prefixes meaning "not": a-, un-, dis-, non-.

  • atypical: prefix a- (not typical)
  • unlit: prefix un- (not lit)
  • disagree: prefix dis- (not agree)
  • nonsmoker: prefix non- (not a smoker)

So the words are: atypical, unlit, disagree, nonsmoker.

6. Highlight the part of the sentence that helps find the meaning of "wring out"

Sentence: She tried to wring out her bathing suit by twisting it until all the water fell to the ground.

The context clue is: by twisting it until all the water fell to the ground (explains "wring out" means twisting to remove water).

Final Answers (Key Parts):
  1. Adverbs: usually, immediately; Adjectives: venomous, medical
  2. Word: valet
  3. Corrected: My grandparents live next door to Uncle John in Cheyenne, Wyoming
  4. Fixed: When is lunch? I’m really hungry. (Run-on)
  5. Words: atypical, unlit, disagree, nonsmoker
  6. Highlight: by twisting it until all the water fell to the ground