Answer:
At the story's conclusion, Dillard reveals that being chased made her happy in some ways. To quote Annie at the end of the book, "If in that snowy backyard, the driver of the black Buick had cut off our heads, Mikey’s and mine, I would have died happy." Dillard isn't telling her readers to be foolish for fun. The author says it's okay if you get in trouble occasionally because being happy says the author. Annie knew it was wrong to throw snowballs at passing cars, but she did it anyway. The author exaggerates the thrilling parts of the story. Dillard describes the three runners' many twists and turns to help readers understand Annie's exhilaration. Dillard ends the essay without explaining what the man does after calling the kids "foolish." The author shifts focus to how she felt rather than what the enraged businessman did. Annie Dillard writes for readers to relate to and learn from.
Explanation:
Change some words to avoid plagiarism; once I post this, the teacher will be able to tell if you copied. :)
<span> In English, the subject pronouns are I, you, he, she, it, we, ye, they, what, and who.
Option D is the only option with a subject pronoun.
We can't believe the tickets are in the front row!
Hope this helps.</span>
This question is about “The Curse of the Poisoned Pretzel” by Paul Haven
Answer and Explanation:
To make it look like Skidmore poisoned his own brother, the author shows how Skidmore hated his brother and hated him for silly and superfluous things, like thinking that his brother was provoking him by chewing gum while he was allergic. The author reinforces the enmity between them, but states that everyone loved Skidmore's brother, making the reader suspicious of anyone for poisoning, except Skidmore.
Answer:
beauty technician
Explanation:
they fit with the letters that are givin in the question. also, it fits the definition that is stated in the question.