<span>For over two hundred years, the reason for New England's Dark Day was unknown.
This represents the main idea because it lets the reader know that the passage is talking about a "Dark Day", where it happened (New England), and the fact that for over two hundred years it was a mystery. It also gives an indication that the mystery will have been solved by the end of the passage. </span>
The narrative voice of the statement is described by the following statement-The paragraph has a first-person narrator sharing an eyewitness account.
Explanation:
we can see in the question that the narrator talks like a first person by using words like "I, me, my, mine, we, us, our, ours."
"I, me, my, mine" are called first-person singular pronouns. These are pronouns one uses when one states his action..
"We, us, our, ours" are first person possessive pronouns. we make use of such pronouns when we are talk about the acts of the other person . .
- "First-person singular pronouns are 'I,' 'me,' 'my,' and 'mine.
- ' First-person plural pronouns are 'we,' 'us,' 'our,' and 'ours. '
- First-person possessive pronouns are 'my,' 'mine,' 'our,' and 'ours. '
- First-person subjective pronouns are 'I,' 'we,' 'my,' and 'our."
Thus we can say that the narrative voice of the statement is described by the statement that -The paragraph has a first-person narrator sharing an eyewitness account.
No. Science cannot go too far. Science is the method of pursuing knowledge, and the pursuit of knowledge. Knowledge in itself is not dangerous. It only becomes dangerous when people use it for immoral purposes, and THAT has nothing to do with the science that produced the knowledge.
B- They both describe the main points of a text.
Amy uses imagery to show her feelings because her family is embarrassing her in front of someone she likes. She describes how they are doing it, as imagery.