In the beginning of the book it is kinda tense/ intense.<span>The entire period from the time he wakes up until Grete's violin solo and his death is one long battle to adjust to his new body </span>
Answer:
The first sentence has an idiom: over the moon
Explanation:
Both the second and 3rd sentence do not contain figurative language
the 4th sentence contains a simile not an idiom
Answer:
Hi your question lacks the required options here are the options
A. Though she started with the flute two years later, Aisha plays the piano and the flute very well
now.
B. Though she started with the flute two years later; Aisha plays the piano and the flute very well
now.
C. Though she started with the flute two years later, but Aisha plays the piano and the flute very
well now.
D. Though she started with the flute two years later Aisha plays the piano and the flute very well now
Answer : Though she started with the flute two years later, Aisha plays the piano and the flute very well now( A )
Explanation:
The best way to combine the information in the two clauses is : Though she started with the flute two years later, Aisha plays the piano and the the flute very well.
This is because the two clauses carry a piece of information which is incomplete and to combine the clauses to get the complete information a ( , ) is used in order to indicate the beginning and the end of each clause that make up the complete information. The third sentence contains a " but " which is a reason word therefore those not represent the best way of combining the clauses because one of the clause already contains a reason word " though "
If you need some adjectives:
astonishing
mesmerising
astounding
I believe that an unhappy ending can do that.
When a story has a happy ending, then you finish it and you feel satisfied and joyful about how the story ended. On the other hand, if the story ends in an unhappy manner, you start thinking about the resolutions and imagining what could lead to such an ending and how it could be fixed.