Answer
One of the central themes of "The Necklace" is that of appearance vs. reality. For Mathilde, the necklace symbolizes wealth, beauty, and, ultimately, shame, as she loses the necklace and goes into debt to replace it. The great irony of the story is that the necklace was a fake. Mathilde spends ten years in debt, effectively ruining her life over nothing.
Answer: I am delighted to introduce Dr. Anna Smith, a psychiatrist, who will talk to us about parent-child relationships.
Explanation: There should’ve been a comma after psychiatrist.
Answer:
The sentence in which the subject and the verb agree is:
Some of Meredith's poems make me laugh.
Explanation:
In English we must pay attention to the subject in order to choose the correct form of the verb that refers to it. If the subject is plural, the verb must be in its plural form. But if it's singular, the verb must be altered in accordance, especially if it is the third person of speech (he, she, or it). Let's take a look at the sentences:
1. Nothing taste as good as my dad's five-alarm chili. --> "taste" refers to "nothing". Since "nothing" is third-person singular, the correct conjugation would be "tastes".
2. Most of the group's music are playing on the radio. --> "are" refers to "most", but "most" refers to "music", which is uncountable. For that reason, "most" needs a singular verb. The correct form would be "is".
3. Several of those coats is on sale this week. --> "is" refers to "several". "Several" implies that there are many of something, and it refers to "coats", which is clearly plural. The correct form would be "are".
4. Some of Meredith's poems make me laugh. --> This is the sentence with the correct subject-verb agreement. "Some" refers to "poems", which is a countable noun in its plural form. Thus, the verb "make" is correct.
Answer:
Reading books and watching movies are similar because they are telling the same story. They give the reader or the audience the same feelings after reading or watching about the story. The reader can feel sad of the story in a book while the audience can also feel the same after watching about the story in the movie.
Explanation:
(this isn't a true story, just trying to help)(maybe give you an idea)
When I was 10 I went to a theme park and was so excited to ride the biggest rollercoaster there. It was very unusual for my family to go to things like this so I was really intrigued for all the rides. It was going to take a while for us to arrive so for pastime I played games on my phone like always. As the car was entering the theme park my eyes were absorbed to the biggest rollercoaster there, I just couldn't keep my eyes off of it. As I was in the line for the ride I was happy and couldn't wait but as I got closer and closer I started getting agitated in nervousness. My stomach turned and I felt drained, the line seemed to have accelerated and then finally it was in the front of the line. (I hope this helped.. sorry that this isn't the best :/)