<span>When using sensory language, what this means
is that you should use language that covers as many of the five senses as
possible. What this means is that you
should use adjectives that cover sight, hearing, smell, touch, and taste. Of course, the more senses you can include,
the better. This is the case because
since readers were not there to experience what you did, by including
descriptors of as many senses as possible, you will be able to provide the best
picture for them to visualize as they read your descriptions. </span>
Rainsford had dug himself in when he was in France when a seconds delay meant death.
Answer: I honestly think these are idioms
Explanation:
he uses foreshadowing,settings,plot,and characters to reveal the theme.
apostrophy
it’s, let’s, she’s, they’re, I’ve, don’t
quotation marks
“Any further delay,” she said, “would result in a lawsuit.”
His latest story is titled “The Beginning of the End”; wouldn't a better title be “The End of the Beginning”?
paranthesis
When a parenthetical sentence exists on its own, the terminal punctuation goes inside the closing parenthesis.
She nonchalantly told us she would be spending her birthday in Venice (Italy, not California). (Unfortunately, we weren’t invited.)
have a goeed day