Answer:
thesis statement
Explanation:
A thesis statement is the road map for the whole research paper, it gives guidance to the reader on how is the matter going to be approached by the author, and it has to answer the question that the author has in mind, it should be disputable by others and should be object of study.
Answer:
Paragraph 1
Explanation:
You only need to say Corbin, (2015) once to let you know that that is his information.
If you read a paraphrase of a primary source in a published work and want to cite that source, it is best to read and cite the primary source directly if possible; if not, use a secondary source citation. A paraphrase may continue for several sentences. In such cases, cite the work being paraphrased on first mention.
The last one, "O Jane, the purple flowers look better than the pink flowers in the center of the table, right?"
Also, here's a tip when it comes to things like this, try speaking the sentance aloud. However, pause for a brief moment whenever there's a comma. This will help determine whether the comma would fit in the sentence or not.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Simile (D)
Explanation:
It uses "as" to compare two things
Since Semantics is the study of meanings of words, you could do:
- Dictionaries
- Some weird word meanings and where they came from
- What we use to find out the meanings of rarely-used words
- Words whose meanings have completely changed over the years.
- Ancient words we still use today
- Words that have completely lost their meanings over the years
- And words that have a weird meaning.
Hope that hepls! Good luck with your presentation!