The correct answer is D. their.
Given that the castles are plural (meaning there is more than one castle), you need to use the plural pronoun as well, and their is the only plural pronoun among these options, so you don't really have other choice. If the noun was singular (the castle), then you would use its (never his or hers because castles are not male or female).
I think it would be "A" because in Pyramids and Thisbe they had the crack to talk from. Where as in Romeo and Juliet they quite a ways away
Answer: Building a Snowman
Explanation:
Step 1: Put on your winter clothes. (Boots, coat, hat, scarf, gloves, etc.)
Step 2: Go outside and find a untouched snowy spot.
Step 3: Create a snowball in your hands.
Step 4: Roll the snowball into the size you desire. (Repeat 3 times)
Step 5: Stack your 3 snowballs and add details as desired.
Answer:
Option d. The structures of both excerpts are similar as each relates an anecdote to appeal to the reader's emotions.
Explanation:
in the excerpt from "Take the Tortillas Out of Your Poetry" the writer tells an anecdote of a friend that decided to try to erase his own culture from his poetry work, in order to have better chances at receiving a fellowship. In the excerpt from "Speaking Arabic" the author tells the story of a stranger he overheard at a fair, that was expressing his emotions of alienation in the cultural environment he was in. Both excerpts use anecdotes, short stories about a real incident and person in order to appeal to the reader's emotions.
Answer:
I am so hungry I could eat a horse.
I have a thousand things to do today.
Explanation: