<span>When the sentence has nothing to do with the paragraph that is written
</span>
Answer:
I carefully prepared a homemade pizza crust and put on it the very freshest and tasty ingredients.
Explanation:
Why? The adverb, as it says, modifies the verb.
A lot of times, not all the time, they end in -ly
- In the first one "<em>most</em>" does nothing and the sentence doesn't seem to even have a verb. (to run, to walk, etc)
- In the second one it is getting closer, but too is not the adverb
- In the third one homemade is a adjective / describing word, not an adverb
- In the fourth one <em>carefully </em>is an adverb and it is <em>italiczed</em>.
<u>Trick:</u>
- Stacey ran quickly.
What did she do? Ran. How did she do it? Quickly.
Verb = ran
Adverb = quickly
Hope this helps, good luck!
(I typed out a lot more to try and explain it since you said you don't understand it at all)
I don't know for sure but I think the second one is an intensive pronoun
Answer:
situational irony
Explanation:
Situational irony occurs when the reader is waiting for an event to happen, but what happens is the opposite and totally unexpected event, which surprises the reader, for having been unpredictable.
The above text is an example of situational irony because as we read the text we are sure that a cheff who makes meat dishes admired in the world is a meat lover, but we were surprised to find that the cheff is vegan.