Answer:
The sentence that best revises the supportive evidence is As a result, students who typically arrive late will wake up earlier and leave home sooner.
Explanation:
Revision is the action or process of reviewing, editing and improving
Following this statement, the option D gives us the best an logical order at the moment of presenting the argument and the supporting evidence as a most likely result of the proposal.
Actually, Lisa skates better than he
Actually, <em>he </em>skates better than Lisa
Because in elliptical clauses words are purposely left out because of pattern or logic of the sentence.
(Im not 100% sure ive just started learning it but it seems logical sorry if im not helpful)
Answer:
This speech sets the mood for the horrible events which will follow...namely the murder of Duncan, which leads to the murders and deaths of so many others.
It prepares the audience for what is to come, teaches them about Lady Macbeth's character and what she is capable of, and also informs the audience as to the type of person Macbeth is. We know, for instance, from her speech, that he would not come up with the idea of murdering Duncan on his own and he certainly would not go through with this plan if she were not there to give him "courage".
The speech also sets up the theme of gender roles--Lady Macbeth at the beginning is more of the pants-wearing character by her own character analysis than her husband who is, according to her, "too full of the milk of human kindness" to do anything against his beloved King.
Setting these two up as strong vs. weak at the beginning makes for interesting comparisons later in the play when Lady Macbeth becomes weaker and more human...guilt-ridden and suicidal and when Macbeth begins planning murders without the help of his horrid wife.
Without that speech, the play would be a very different being. It is essential to not only the plot but character development.
Explanation:
The type of figurative language that is used in the sentence from George Orwell's novel Keep the Aspidistra Flying is a metaphor. A metaphor is a figure of speech that compares two different things in an implied way. In this line, the public is compared to a swine and advertising is compared to the rattling of a stick inside a swill-bucket.