David brings a video camera to class in order to document "violations" by Mr. Neck.
<span>David must have mentioned the hairy-eyeball treatment to his lawyer that afternoon because the next day there is a videocamera set up in the back of class. "David Petrakis is my hero".</span>
<span>-Gradesaver.com</span>
Answer:
fill in the blanks for the instruction bc im not sure what the essay is about
Intro: The disabled aren't given enough benefits to assist them in living a regaled and assisted life. (hook) Many aren't aware that (state a fact about how some of the disabled are not treated well and they don't have a caretaker.) It is crucial that the disabled are given more options such as *state 3 options to talk about for your 3 body paragraphs* (thesis statement.) Disabled people *state a sentence that would flow and relate to all your paragraphs.*
Explanation:
sorry i couldn't write the others but tell why disabled people need those options and explain why the fact is relevant for the other two boxes.
hope this helped!
Answer:
I would say the effects of high-fat and low-fat diets.
Explanation:
For [A] a report on how to reduce air pollution would be expository or persuasive.
For [B] a mystery story would be entertaining and engaging.
For [C] why Great Britain was the birthplace of the industrial revolution would be a persuasive exposition, factually based.
For [D] you would write and exposition comparison to describe the benefits and detriments of the two types of diets, thus a "compare-and-contrast" essay.
Cheers.
Answer:
D. Changed to a question, exclamation or command.
Explanation:
It's important to be clear that 'statement', 'question', 'command' and 'exclamation' are defined as sentence patterns which means that they are defined grammatically. A statement is defined, ned as having a structure in which there is typically a Subject, followed by a verb and then a further unit such as a Direct Object.
Exclamations are short utterances that you make when you are very surprised or upset. They are not always whole sentences. Sometimes they are more like a noise than a word. In this case, they are called interjections.
Command sentences ordinarily, but not always, begin with an imperative (fussy) verb because they tell someone to do something. Examples: - " Stop talk! " shouted the teacher. - " Catch the ball! " screamed the crowd.
<span>writing to convince your audience about an opinion
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