No, because excitement is an emotion. When something is “very exciting” it causes extreme joy. Interest is something that makes you curious. When something is “very interesting” it causes one to seek out more information, which in some scenarios may cause excitement.
Answer:
Changing the order of events can build tension and suspense. When a story is presented chronologically, the story is presented in the sequence of events in which it would have occurred. Thus, events will be understood to logically follow one another as things unfold—the order is logical and surprises are rare.
It would be, because you have to quote them with paranthesis
Here is a narrative paragraph to illustrate the three tools for coherence, which, in turn, are underlined and explained below:
[<u>More and more kids are overweighted nowadays</u> and <u>the impacts on health from having bad eating habits are an ever growing threat for society.</u>] Compound sentence: there is at least two independent clauses.
[This is the reason <u>why</u> doctors, <u>who are specialized in the field,</u> highly recommend to go on [<u>a healthy</u> and <u>balanced diet along with regular excercise</u>, to stay healthy, not only physically but also emotionally.]
Relative pronouns: "why", "who"; appositive phrase: "who are specialized in the field"; Compound sentence: "More and more kids are overweighted nowadays and the impacts on health from having bad eating habits are an ever growing threat for society."
The moon was a ghostly galleon tossed upon cloudy seas