B. run-on
It is thoughts that just keep going without ending the sentence and joined together with the conjunction and.
Answer:
The fictional excerpt is more poetic than the nonfictional excerpt.
Explanation:
In the fictional passage about <em>Angel Agnes</em> from the chapter "Agnes saves a child but dies herself", Agnes is shown in a deep slumber. But the narrative voice uses the words <em>"wandering, or perhaps she was dreaming"</em>, which is poetic and even fairy-tale like. The further description about her appearance provides an image of something more ethereal than a normal, realistic image.
On the other hand,<em> The Summer of the Pestilence</em> provides a historical account of the Yellow fever and the effects it had on man. The passage deals with the realistic, even violent images of the effects of the disease, an unpleasant picture.
The two passages about death are presented in such a way that the fictional work is more poetic than the realistic / non fictional excerpt.
Separate but equal was a legal doctrine in United States constitutional law according to which racial<span> segregation did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, adopted in 1868, which guaranteed "equal protection" under the law to all citizens.</span>
Answer:
Mike's point of view is affect by his grandmother's greeting in the sense that:
B Mike realizes that something is off in his grandmother’s behavior.
Explanation:
In the story "The Moustache" by Richard Cormier, Mike visits his grandmother at a nursing home. <u>She welcomes him with such joy and brightness that he is, at first, relieved.</u> He was afraid it would be one of those days when she couldn't recognize him. <u>However, after a moment, he realizes there is something off in her behavior. He cannot put his finger on it, though. He does not know if she is just happy to be lucid, or if she has been feeling lonely</u>:
<em>I was beginning to feel uneasy, because she regarded me with such intensity. Those bright eyes. I wondered -- </em><u><em>are old people in place like this so lonesome, so abandoned that they go wild when someone visits? Or was she so happy because she was suddenly lucid and everything was sharp and clear?</em></u><em> My mother had described those moments when my grandmother suddenly emerged from the fog that so often obscured her mind. </em><u><em>I didn't know the answers, but it felt kind of spooky, getting such an emotional welcome from her.</em></u>
Yes because it is giving his hair a human action. In this case it is standing up.