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ser-zykov [4K]
3 years ago
7

Are you really here to watch my soccer game, Mrs. Weigand?” I asked shyly.

English
1 answer:
kupik [55]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

The given sentence is a first person point of view statement where the protagonist is kind of embarrassed about the fact that Mrs. Weignad saw him in the soccer game.

Explanation:

This is a key sentence here, because the plot can take any turn from this point. Mrs. Weigand, may be a sweet lady or an inquisitively notorious lady which may cause trouble to the protagonist as the plot goes. Anyway the given sentence has a potential to change the course of the plot.

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Two words that have a similar literal meaning, but different connotations
Nutka1998 [239]

Answer:

Thrifty and stingy are good examples of this because they have the same denotation, but their connotations are different. Thrifty has a positive connotation, while stingy has a negative connotation.

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
Read the following excerpt. What is wrong with the in-text citations? Conflicts of interest can also arise when there is collabo
SCORPION-xisa [38]

Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:

Read the following excerpt. What is wrong with the in-text citations?

Conflicts of interest can also arise when there is collaboration. Joint authorship, the relative placement of authors’ names, co-authored or multi-authored articles, and other issues relating to group authorship can involve "unwarranted and unwanted authorial attribution for personal gain" (Hauptmann, 2008, p. 137). Researcher and author collaboration can also result in misunderstandings about first authorship, responsibility for mistakes or errors once a manuscript is published, and other ethical dilemmas.

a. nothing, the in-text citation is correct.  b. The page number should not be included.  c. The author’s first initial should be included.  d. The title of the book or article should be included.

Answer:

a. nothing, the in-text citation is correct.

Explanation:

A quote occurs when you are writing a text and use information that was spoken by another author, that is you. In order not to be considered plagiarism, you need to reference the author and the page where you found the quote you cited. The correct way to do this is to put, after the sentence that makes up the quote, in parentheses, the surname of the author (or authors), followed by the year of publication of the work where the quote was removed, followed by the number of the page where the quote is can be found in the original work. An example of this is (Hauptmann, 2008, p. 137).

Therefore, we can say that the quote is correct.

6 0
3 years ago
What is the meaning of inept as it is used in the passage
FrozenT [24]
I don't see the passage, but the meaning of inept is

A clumsy, incompetent person — or an ineffective action — is inept. When you're inept, you don't know what you're doing or just can't get it done.

Someone inept is bumbling, clueless, and ineffective. Inept people are dumb or clueless; they don't understand things.

More than that, inept people are bad at what they do. An inept lawyer always loses cases.

An inept figure skater wipes out on the ice. An inept postal worker loses mail and puts it in the wrong box.

An inept person is downright bad at something. The opposite of inept is competent.

Hoped I helped!
8 0
3 years ago
WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST!! PLEASE ONLY ANSWER ASAP IF YOU HAVE READ “A girl who owned a city”
Ad libitum [116K]

Answer:

I think That charlie is justified for stealing food because he needed it but it still  

isnt something we should do every day

Explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
What part of speech is the word in italics? Brian walked slowly home, as the "day" was so warm and pleasant.
svp [43]

It's a NOUN. A person, place, thing, or idea.

4 0
3 years ago
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