Hello! I found the choices for this one from another source. They are:
<span>A. II only
B. I and II
C.II and III
D. I and III
</span>
Out of the three given statements about quotation marks, only the first and third statements are true.
You use quotation marks to identify short quotations. Quotations that are longer than three/four lines have their own indented formatting and doesn't require the marks to separate them anymore.
Also, commas that introduce quotations are never inside quotation marks, since they are not part of the original quoted text anyway.
ANSWER: D. I and III
Answer:
"Born Free: Children and the Struggle for Human Rights" is a story that takes place in 1899 in New York City, when the city's journalists suffered repression against the commercial practices in force at the time, which prevented the sale of newspapers, making it impossible for journalistic work to continue. However, journalism is extremely important to the population and with that in mind, journalists raised their voices in protests within a strike that alerted many people to what was happening. This story shows us how important our voices are and how we should not remain silent in the face of injustice, but rather claim our rights.
Answer:1. A phrase is a related group of words. The words work together as a "unit," but they do not have a subject and a verb. A clause is a group of words that does have both a subject and a verb. ... Some clauses are dependent, meaning that they cannot stand alone.
2. i think it is c
3. i think it is b
Explanation:
"Suddenly Stewart was flying from his desk chair out of his own head."
Owen’s choice of words in Exposure powerfully, but simply, describes the extremes to which he and his men were exposed for two days. The poem is dominated by words from the semantic field of the weather, most of which are qualified by terms with negative associations:
•‘iced east winds’ l.1
•‘mad gusts’ l.6
•‘rain soaks’ l.12
•‘clouds sag stormy’ l.12
•‘Dawn massing in the east’ l.13
•‘ranks of grey’ (cloud) l.14
•‘air .. black with snow’ l.17
•‘flowing flakes’ (snow) l.18
•‘the wind’s nonchalance’ l.19
•‘Pale flakes ‘ (snow) l.21
•‘snow-dazed’ l.22
•‘frost’ l.36
•‘ice’ l.39