Answer:
Sanjay, in his suit and tie <u><em>stood out like a sore thumb</em></u>
Anika's hands were <u><em>shaking like leaves</em></u> as she got up to give her presentation.
The finch was <u><em>as busy as a bee</em></u>, building her nest
Explanation:
Answer:
The saint
The unnamed narrator lives with his uncle, the proprietor of a small furniture-manufacturing business, in an English county market town. The uncle is a prominent lay member of the small Church of the Last Purification, of Toronto, Canada. The Purifiers believe that God created everything; that God, being good, could not have made evil; and that what appears to be evil is an illusion. “Don’t let Error in” is a favorite slogan of the Purifiers: Do not believe in the reality of disease, misfortune, or death, for they are no more than illusions. Membership in the Purifiers brings scorn and persecution from its adherents’ neighbors, but it also gives them the exhilaration of knowing that they alone know the Truth.
The narrator begins to doubt the Truth. If evil is an illusion, where did the illusion come from? He talks to his uncle, who simply repeats the Purifiers’ stock phrases. At this juncture, the Reverend Hubert Timberlake, a leading minister from the Purification Church’s headquarters in Toronto, comes to town. After giving an address on Sunday morning, he spends the afternoon with the narrator’s family. Timberlake, who has been told of the narrator’s wavering faith, proposes that the two of them go punting on the river after dinner. Timberlake insists on poling the punt, to show that he understands young people and that he is a regular guy.
All goes well until Timberlake, lecturing on how Error makes people dwell on sorrow, ignores the narrator’s advice about the river’s current and poles the punt through some willow trees. A tree branch catches him in the chest, lifts him off the punt, and leaves him clinging a...
Answer:
Marian hides the apple before entering the old ladies' home. This tells us an awful lot about what kind of person she is. For Marian is a very selfish individual. She only visits old ladies' homes...
Explanation:
Answer:
B. In formal English, we use words to say precisely what we mean.
Explanation:
Depending on the situation, we may use formal or informal language. In situations revolving around a serious matter or involving people we are not familiar with, we will use formal language. When we are more relaxed and conversing with people we know on a more personal level, we will use informal language.
Formal language is more used in writing, while informal language is more used in speaking. Contractions and abbreviations are characteristics of informal language and should not be used in formal documents. As a resume is a formal document, the language it's written in should be formal. When using formal language, we usually want to get to the point as soon as possible and use words to precisely say what we mean.