It would be the word late.
braylon,
Answer:
A topic sentence comes at the beginning of each paragraph and tells what that specific paragraph will be about. A thesis statement usually comes at the end of the first paragraph in an essay and tells what the rest of the paper will be about.
I guess you would use it at the end to get your point across and show that you have meaning or fact about it
This question is missing the options. I've found them online. They are the following:
Question: In the above excerpt, which words best establish immediacy?
A) "White men have been known to encourage slaves to escape."
B) "… that I should be free."
C) "I pretended not to be interested in what they said."
D) There is no immediacy.
Answer:
The words that best establish immediacy are:
B) "… that I should be free."
Explanation:
<u>By definition, immediacy is the quality of creating excitement and a sense of urgency by involving someone instantly. Now, imagine being a slave and wishing nothing more than freedom. If someone told you to run away "...that [you] should be free," can you imagine how you would feel? The excitement this would bring? The urgency to escape and finally get rid of the cruelties done to you? For that reason, letter B is the best option. "...that I should be free" are the words that create a sense of immediacy.</u>
An example of an affix is any prefix or suffix since an affix is an addition to a word.
An example of a prefix is Anti, Pro, Tele, Un, Ultra, and so on and so forth.
An example of an allusion is, "I couldn't believe her nose wasn't growing as large as Pinocchio's." This is an allusion because it references another character.
An example of a suffix is er, ful, dom, and so on and so forth.
An example of an analogy is like is to love as dislike is to hate.
Hope this helps!