Answer:
I will try
Explanation:
Paragraph writing in fiction doesn’t follow traditional rules. Like storytelling itself, it is artistically liberated, and that liberation gives it the potential to contribute to the story’s aesthetic appeal. Paragraphs build a story segment-by-segment. They establish and adjust the pace while adding subtle texture. They convey mood and voice. They help readers visualize the characters and the way they think and act by regulating the flow of their thoughts and actions.
In this series, adapted from “The Art of the Paragraph” by Fred D. White in the January 2018 issue of Writer’s Digest, we cover paragraph writing by exploring different lengths and kinds of paragraphs—and when to use each one. [Subscribe to Writer’s Digest today.]
How to Write a Descriptive Paragraph:
Descriptive paragraphs enable readers to slip into the story’s milieu, and as such can be relatively long if necessary. Skilled storytellers embed description within the action, setting the stage and mood while moving the story forward. Here is an example from Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child’s The Lost Island, a thriller in which the protagonists hunt for a lost ancient Greek treasure on a Caribbean island, of all places:
Referring to In The Longhouse, Oneida Museum<span>BY <span>ROBERTA HILL
The three parts of the longhouse that mentioned are:
1. The smoke hole
</span></span><em>your mottled air of bark and working </em><em>sunlight,</em><em> </em>
<span><em>wanted your smokehole with its stars</em>,
</span><span>2. The basement Stairs
</span><em>My eyes burn </em>
<span><em>from cat urine under the basement stairs </em>
</span><span>3. The Ridgepole
</span><em>When desolation comes, </em>
<em>I’ll hide your ridgepole in my spine</em><span><em> </em></span><span><em> </em>
</span><span>
</span>
Well, some people collect rocks, so you could write:
I have collected rocks from San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and Boston.
Answer:
D. Georgia O’Keeffe was a woman who spoke through her art, regardless of the critics and her conventional childhood.
Explanation:
The only answer choice that talks about art and all the other choices sound irrelevant.