D. Semicolons are only used when both sides of the semicolon can stand alone as their own sentences about very similar topics.
The answer is :
B.) Then the little girl-daughter put up her soft brown arms with the beautiful white shell bracelets.
On Edgenuity 2020
Reasoning:
I got the question correct on Edgenuity :)
This answer has more adjectives that describes the little girl which allows the reader to have a better image of what is occuring in the story. Compared to the other answer choices, this choice is the best example of imagery. :)
Hope this helps minus my bad explanation :D
Answer:
The antecedent of the interrogative pronoun 'which' will be the choice of two or more antecedent nouns or pronouns that will answer the question.
Examples:
Which pair of shoes looks the best with this dress?
The antecedent will be the answer to the question, such as 'the black ones' or 'the suede pair', from the choices already known to the speaker and the listener.
You might consider the noun phrase 'pair of shoes' as the antecedent, but the sentence can as easily be, 'Which looks best with this dress?' The choices being 'shoes' is already known to the speaker and the listener.
Chocolate, vanilla, or strawberry, which is your favorite?
The antecedent is the noun for the one flavor of the three that the listener prefers.
hope this helped!
I think the correct answer is possessives
Answer:
The best summary of the scene in Chapter 5 is:
C. The dock's green light, which represents Gatsby's idealized love for Daisy, has lost its enchantment now that she is beside him.
Explanation:
"Possibly it had occurred to him that the colossal significance of that light had now vanished forever."
That is what Nick, the narrator, says once the scene unravels. The main character, Gatsby, spent five years dreaming of gaining back the love of his life, Daisy. As he got closer to his dream's completion and moved to a mansion across the bay from hers, Gatsby focused on a green light that shone from Daisy's dock.
The light acquired a meaning, representing Gatsby's goal. He idealized Daisy for all those years, working hard - even becoming a criminal - just to get her back. And now that he finally has her, there is nothing to hope for anymore. No more dream, no ideals, nothing. The light has just lost its significance.