Answered

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But, as Featherstone shows, focus groups actually rejected some features that spelled the Edsel’s doom, including the name, which group members thought “sounded too much like ‘weasel.’”

Should the writer keep or delete the underlined text?

Sagot :

The writer  should delete the part of “sounded too much like ‘weasel." as it makes no meaning to the sentence.

What does sentence structure mean?

The word order for a sentence is Subject + Verb + Object. He (subject) earned his degree (verb) (object).

Grammar's classification of sentences according to the quantity and kind of clauses in their syntactic structure is known as sentence composition or sentence and clause structure. This split is a feature of conventional grammar.

Subject, verb, object, complement, and adjunct are the components of a five-sentence structure (SVOCA). The person who performs an action or who acts as the verb's agent is the subject. A noun or any of its counterparts, such as a pronoun, noun phrase, or noun clause, normally creates it at the start of a sentence.

From the sentence above, you can see that the sentence do make sense without the phrase sounded too much like ‘weasel.’". By including this phrase, it is expanding on the topic in question and as such, it is not relevant.

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