A thesis statement is a sentence in an essay, report, research paper, or speech that identifies the main idea and/or central purpose of the text.
The thesis statement serves as the organizing principle of the text and usually appears in the introductory paragraph, often at the end.
She has seen so much destruction that it has overshadowed her own life<span>
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Emily Dickinson uses stanzas in the poem "A Narrow Fellow in the Grass" to create rhythm and organize her thoughts in units. Each unit suggests a specific pattern in a rhythmic sense, in this poem she uses thirty lines divided into five stanzas. In this poem she alternates line of eight syllables and six syllables.
While none of these sentences is particularly horrible, I would say that B is the best example of faulty coordination--if you note that the verbs switch from past to present tense within the same sentence, it draws attention in a very awkward way. Each clause could be it's own fully developed sentence, with more detail. The remaining sentences work well as stand alone sentences, and are congruent in structure and content.