A. Yes ; the answer could vary depending on whether or not your lawyer was less fluent in talking than another lawyer in the courtroom
Answer:
A character expects the opposite of what the reader knows will happen.
A character acts in a way the reader knows to be unsuitable or untimely to the actual circumstances.
A character makes a statement that the reader recognizes as sarcastic but which the other characters in the story may not.
Explanation:
Dramatic irony is defined as the "When the audience knows something the character does not"
In all of these situations, the character does not know what is happening but the audience does.
<span>He is lazy and jealous of Johnny's skills as a silversmith.</span>
Answer:
Partly it depends on the type of aguement but in most cases no:)
Explanation:
Answer:
All three clauses in the sentence are independent clauses:
1. She turned left
2. he steered right
3. and I kept going straight ahead
Explanation:
An independent clause is a group of words that can convey a complete thought on its own, being able to stand alone as a sentence. In other words, when you read an independent clause alone, it makes perfect sense.
In the sentence we are analyzing here, three independent clauses were put together, combined with a comma between the firs two, and a comma plus the coordinating conjunction "and" between the final two.
"She turned left, he steered right, and I kept going straight ahead."
If we separate each clause, they will still make perfect sense alone:
1. She turned left
2. he steered right
3. and I kept going straight ahead