Answer:
A person who enters a premises with the intention of committing a crime.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
the pronoun that replaces a noun
Answer:
A: anaphora
B: ethos appeal
C: figurative language
D: dramatic irony
E: pathos appeal
(I'm not sure about C since the word bank is not included, but I am 100% on others)
Use Concrete Examples The best place to start with your character description is with concrete examples. To say that a character has "brown hair" doesn't create nearly the image as saying that a character has long dreadlocks. Think about what kind of clothes the character wears, whether a character has freckles or moles, whether her teeth are straight or crooked or what kind of scars he has.
Make Examples Do More Avoid overloading your reader with a list of details about each character's appearance.
To create a vivid image of your character without spending a lot of time on minutia, choose details that have a ripple effect on the description.
The woman lays still, blood pooling around her body as people crowd around her. She's cold to the touch, skin growing more pale as each second passes.