Answer:
Quotation 1 contains a capitalization error.
Quotation 2 wrongly uses 'ellipses.'
Quotation 3 makes incorrect use of a comma.
Explanation:
The first quotation communicates a complete sentence and therefore, the first letter must be capitalized('The brave men') to make it grammatically correct.
In the second quotation, ellipses have been used incorrectly. It is a punctuation mark consisting of three periods('...') to indicate the omission of a word or phrase that can be inferred from the text. It communicates a complete idea but in this quotation, the idea is not completed after 'nation...' and therefore, the readers are not able to understand it.
The last quotation employs comma inappropriately succeeding the word 'finally' as the sentence is quite short and the use of comma unnecessarily breaks its meaning. There is no need for a comma here as the meaning is more clear and precise without using it.
Answer:
the verb tense of yelled is past
Explanation:
The past tense of yell is yelled. The third-person singular simple present indicative form of yell is yells. The present participle of yell is yelling. The past participle of yell is yelled.
Hello,
Considering I don't know what text you're referring to, I'll just answer the question as defining it.
A refugee can be defined as a person who is forced to leave their country to escape war, persecution, or a natural disaster.
And this combo, in Hurston's genius hands, totally works. If you think about Zora Neale Hurston's choice of writing style, you can definitely put your finger on twodistinct voices in Their Eyes Were Watching God. One of these voices—the narrator's—is lyrical, philosophical, and almost classical.
Answer:
At the end of Anton Chekhov's The Bet, the lawyer survives the 15 years in prison but refuses to take the money. In a literary twist, the banker plans to murder the lawyer the day the lawyer is released from prison so that he does not have to pay him.