B he uses imagery to suggest the character is unreliable
As of July 2017, the Ark Encounter company has not released how it is doing financially. Mr Ham who owns and operates the company has declined to provide attendance records or how much has been made. There are numerous news articles stating declining visitors and that the Ark Encounter is failing.
An intransitive verb is an action verb<span>, expressing a doable activity like </span>arrive<span>, </span>go<span>, </span>lie<span>, </span>sneeze<span>, </span>sit<span>, </span>die<span>, etc. Unlike a </span>transitive verb<span>, it will </span>not<span> have a </span>direct object<span> receiving the action. Did and Attend are both words who are likely to have a direct object receiving the action; therefore they are likely transitive.</span>
The sentence 'I recieved her letter of resignation' contains a spelling error.
Option D.
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Explanation:</u></h3>
The correct spellings of 'recieved' are 'received'.
The word 'receive' means getting something from someone or something. For example: Allison received a medal for winning the drawing contest. In this sentence, Allison was given a medal by her school.
The word follows a very old and common English vocabulary rule called: I before E except after C. According to this rule, in certain words, alphabet 'i' shall be placed before alphabet 'e' as long as they are preceding the alphabet 'c'. For example: In F-R-I-E-N-D, I is placed before E as they are not [preceding the alphabet C; which in this word does not exist entirely.
But, if the letters 'i' and 'e' are to be placed right after alphabet 'c', then the 'e' shall precede 'i'. For example: In words such as 'R-E-C-E-I-V-E' and 'P-E-R-C-E-I-V-E', E precedes I as they both are placed right after 'c'.
To avoid this common mistake, it is advised to refer to a spell check.
Answer:
Diction is the foundation of voice and contributes to all of its elements.
Explanation:
Occasion = level of formality Formal – scholarly writing, serious prose, poetry Informal – expository essays, newspaper articles, fiction Colloquial – “slang” – to create a mood or capture a historic or regional dialect.