How is the relative pronoun in the adjective clause used in the sentence? I ate a snack of almonds, which satisfied my hunger. A. direct object B. object of a preposition C. subject D. possessive
C?
@DollyAcquah
B
@esshotwired
So what grade are you in? Just to make sure we're thinking of the same thing
It's A @blueweek77
Which satisfied my hunger was a prepositional phrase, right
So it's A?
Yes @blueweek77
Thanks :D
welcome
It was C
I- personal pronoun serving as the subject of the sentence. ate- verb a- article indicating number snack- noun serving as the direct object of- preposition starting the prepositional phrase almonds- noun serving as object of the preposition of almonds- prepositional phrase modifying snack which- relative pronoun, referring to snack in the independent clause. satisfied- verb of the adjective clause my- pronoun indicating possession hunger- noun, the object of the adjective clause "which" is the only relative pronoun in the sentence. It renames "snack", the direct object. Your questioner is probably expecting the answer "direct object."
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