The correct phrase is "senior to" because "senior" (like "junior," "inferior," and "superior") is followed by "to".
Example: "He is senior to me in the company."
"Than" is used for comparative degrees (e.g., taller than, stronger than).
"Had been working" is used for an action that started in the past and continued up to another point in the past.
Since 2010 indicates a time duration, which suits the past perfect continuous tense.
All the apples have been eaten by them.
In passive voice, the object ("all the apples") becomes the subject and the tense remains present perfect.
Structure: has/have + been + past participle → have been eaten.
"Wisdom" is an abstract noun because it refers to a quality or idea that cannot be seen or touched.
It represents a state of mind, not a physical object.
"Sent" is a transitive verb because it requires a direct object ("an email") to complete its meaning.
A transitive verb always acts on something—here, "email" receives the action of "sent."
The sentence combines the two ideas using the relative adverb "where," which links the place (town) with the action (grew up).
This construction clearly expresses both the location and the action in a grammatically correct manner.
Imagery involves using detailed and sensory-rich language to evoke mental pictures and emotions in the reader's mind.
It appeals to the senses, helping the reader experience the scene, sounds, smells, or feelings described.
A puppy is a young dog, just as cubs are young lions.
The relationship is of young one to its adult form.
The phrase "on the way" means something is physically blocking or present along the path.
"There was a parked van on the way" is grammatically and contextually correct.
"Last night" tells when the action happened.
Adverbs of time describe when something occurs (e.g., today, yesterday, last night).