Respuesta :
These are a lot of question on one thread but I'm going to try and answer them all. Some of the I cannot explain so you're just going to have the answers.
1. Felipe never had any interest in playing basketball.
2. happy + -ness
In this case, it's going to be happiness where you remove “y” and add “i”.
3. homophones.
Homophones are, for example: ate, eight.
4. Too much cheese isn't good for your diet.
5. crisis
All of the others are plural. I don't think crisis has any plural form.
6. fameous
It's going to be famous.
7. They don’t never have chocolate.
The double negative is don't never which means: do not never
8. Add -s.
You just have to add s to make holiday plural. Like this: holidays.
9. singular
10. Frenzy is a synonym for fury.
11. Reign and rein are homophones.
12. Although we had tickets to the game.
13. antonyms
Meager and ample are two opposites.
14. shop + -er
This way: shopp + -er = shopper.
15. dress’s
16. alliteration
In this sentence, they’re using the alphabet t repeatedly. “Tripping and trembling they traipsed through the trees.”
17. synonyms
Remorse and regret are same or almost similar words.
18. Jason is scarcely well.
19. After the recent rainstorm, several neighbors decided to fix their leaking roofs.
20. The writers use the figurative language to capture the interest of their readers.
21. replace + -ing
Like this: replac + -ing = replacing
22. commit + -ment
You don’t have to double the alphabet t for the word commitment.
23. The figure of speech that gives objects and animals human characteristics is called simile.
Example: Sarah is as brave as a lion. In this case, Sara and lion are predicate nouns.
Any
Happiness
Homophones
Isn't
Crisis
Fameous
They don't never have chocolate.
Change the y to i and add es.
Singular Possessive
Fury
Rein
He bought tickets to the game.
Antonyms
Shopper
Dress
Alliteration
Synonym
Jason is scarcely never well.
Roofs
To capture the interest of their readers
Replaceing
Commitment
Personification
And that's all twenty-three questions answered