Here are the answers as to why an author includes dialect in a story: to allude to a character’s regional background; to allude to a character’s social background; and <span>to add to the cultural context of a story’s setting. When we say dialect, this is the specific form of language that is used by someone who is from a specific region. In other words, this is called as a local language or vernacular. When this is added in a story, this gives it a more culturally specific form of approach. </span>
I would choose the first and the fourth excerpt from the list represented above.
These lines of the first exceprt best represent the needed idea :
<span>What port received thy vessel from the main?
Or comest thou single, or attend thy train?”
And here are the lines which do the same thing :
</span><span>The rage of hunger and of thirst repress'd:
To watch the foe a trusty spy he sent:
I'm pretty sure it helps!</span>
Answer:
John Milton was an English poet that was born in England in 1608 and died in 1674. He was best known for his epic <em>Paradise Lost</em>, and because of his strong belief in liberty and also in the right that people had to read and interpret the Bible by themselves.
The fact that Milton was born into a Protestant family, from the Church of England, was really important because first, it marked his belief in the individual reading and interpretation of the Bible, and second, because he almost became a priest himself. The second important thing about his family is that his father was an amateur composer, which marked and influenced Milton´s own passion for music and also the importance of it to his poetry later in life.
The correct answer choice is answer choice B, The monster reared its head at the tourists. Many people do not understand the difference between its and it's.
Its - possessive form of it
It's - contraction meaning 'it is'
When trying to figure out whether to use 'its' or 'it's', ask yourself if the sentence makes sense when you substitute 'it is'. If it does, then use 'it's'. If it doesn't, use 'its'.