Answer:
a
Explanation:
Title : Eiffel Tower
A buisness man bursts in through the door to his family in chicago happy as ever. To them this is something ordinary as he is happy when he gets off work but to him its something a lot bigger. He explains to them that he's going on a buisness trip and could make his family millions. (Two week cut) Two weeks later and the man is finally about to leave chicago he says his goodbyes to his family and leaves. as he arrives in france he start heading to the meeting place in a cab. he arrived, next to the eiffel tower in all its glory. The man meets with the other buisness men but to the mans suprise they are goblins who've been living under the eiffel tower. The man starts panicking thinking he's being punished for never spending time with his family but the goblins think otherwise. they want to trade millions of dollars to the buisness man so he could tell the world they exist, in the end he agrees. (Two year cut) Finally after all those years goblins and humans co-live with one another.
Answer:
The line from "The Medicine Bag" that contains dialogue is:
D. "You found the money in my boots?" he asked Mom.
Explanation:
"The Medicine Bag" is a short story by author Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve in which the theme concerns heritage and culture.
Every option given contains something that was said by someone. However, in options A through C, we do not have it in the form of a dialogue. Those options are reporting what was said. Notice that none of them uses quotation marks. Option D, on the other hand, is written in the form of a dialogue. It has quotation marks to separate the narrator's words from the character's words. For that reason, letter D is the best option.
<span>An adjective and adverb phrase differ in that an adverb modifies verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. To help remember the difference, the word itself has “verb” inside it, and adverbs tend to end in “-ly.” “Slowly,” “loudly,” and “happily” are all adverbs. examples </span>
1. All action verbs can be paired with an adverb. If you do something, you do it well not good. For example: Turtles walk slowly.
2. An adverb can’t modify a noun. The trick here is that not all –ly words are adverbs, some are adjectives too. For example, it’s correct to say the bright table (adjective) or the brightly colored table (compound adjective) but not the brightly table. On the other hand, it is correct to say “the friendly puppy.”
3. Use this simple trick to decide when to use an adverb or an adjective: If the construction works with the verb “to be”, it is correct. For example, the puppy is friendly works because friendly is an adjective.
4. Verbs that describe senses, including feel, seem and appear, require adjectives. For example, don’t feel bad or that sounds good. By using the “to be” test, it’s easy to see that Tim feels bad. (Tim is bad) is correct, but Tim feels badly (Tim is badly) isn’t.
5. Adjectives or predicate adjectives are required by linking verbs that do not describe actions. These adjectives modify and refer back to a noun or pronoun at the beginning of a sentence. Examples include: I feel sick and Julie was anxious.
Answer:
happiness upon returning home