Answer:
Explanation:
daring, intrepid, courageous, brave, valiant, fearless, unafraid, undaunted, dauntless, valorous. audacious, adventurous, dashing, heroic, gallant, swashbuckling, adventuresome, daredevil, venturesome, plucky, unflinching.
Answer: Sentences 2, 4 and 5 are written in passive voice.
Explanation:
We use passive voice when we want to put an emphasis on the action and the object, rather than subject. In other words, subject is either insignificant in that particular case, or we do not know who/what the subject is. The object from the active sentence becomes the subject in the passive sentence.
For example, active sentence is: <em>One of my favorite authors wrote </em><em><u>that book</u></em>, while passive sentence is: <em><u>That book</u></em><em> was written by one of my favorite authors</em>.
We form passive from the auxiliary verb (often verb <em>to be</em>) and past participle.
Answer:
The one that best describes the effect of the narration in the excerpt is that It emphasizes Farquhar's euphoric feelings about the rope breaking and his apparent survival.
Explanation:
This excerpt from "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge." describes the intense feeling of being alive after experiencing a hard situation that might had led to a fatal end, all of the adjectives used in these lines are meant to elevate the emotion that it will trigger in the reader, and it makes the moment more intense for the story.
Answer:
playful and comical
Explanation:
From the excerpt, the mood is playful and comical.
This is true because the author revealed that they "pattered pitty-pat, pitty-pat each with feet and toenails, ears and hair, everything but tails,..." This shows that they were in a playful mood. Also, despite the way they pattered, when they got to the Philadelphia union depot, they had nothing to say. This also added a comical effect in the excerpt.