The rough, rugged and haunted Dallas fascinates Pony. Even before Pony becomes an ace storyteller, Dallas acts as his muse, or inspiration. Pony says,
I used to like to draw his picture when he was in a dangerous mood, for then, I could get his personality down in a few lines. (1.46)
Notice the "used to." This is some subtle foreshadowing. Pony no longer sketches Dally because Dally's already dead when Pony's writing. His death is one of his reasons Pony's writing this piece in the first place
1. Is evaluation to “was what the writer said worthwhile?”
2. Is Interpretation to “what does the writer say?”
3. Is Analysis to “How does the writer say it?”
Answer:
B) documented without plagiarism
Explanation:
Plagiarism:
The Oxford Dictionary defines plagiarism as, <em>"</em><em>The practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own</em><em>”. </em>Plagiarism is a form of academic dishonesty that entails including or using someone else's words without citing or giving due credit.
The student has paraphrased the text really well, without using the original author's words. The direct quotation is also correctly structured to avoid plagiarism. As a rule, direct quotes are placed in quotation marks, with due credit to the author and quoted verbatim.
Answer:
D. They both changed the rules of poetry.
Explanation:
Whitman wrote in free verse, often with lengthy sentences. Dickinson was the opposite, her poems were short and terse.
B - Author's name is always first, with title of article, then remaining information for finding that article should follow.