Both authors of "In Flanders Fields" and "Dulce et Decorum Est!" chose the same historical event as the setting but these books shows the World War 1 from two absolutely different points of view. "In Flanders Fields" author praises and blesses all those warriors who protected their native land fighted for it and its future generations. While reading this story you feel persuasive tone that aimed to make you feel the same. "Dulce et Decorum Est!" shows the most appalling things that happened during the War and urges us that if we had ever been through It all it would have been the worst nightmare in our life. To conclude : in the first story author eulogizes War whereas the second warns against it.
Dialogue. He briefly explained everything he saw.
Answer:
sorry but i cant see what u wrote
Explanation:
Answer:
When life gets hard you might want to give up but you have to keep going. Life does not allways give you what you want. But you need to try your best and give it the best you can to achieve your goals. People around you are not allways who you think they are. Life is never what you expect it to be but you have to keep on going. There will be hard times but thats how life is and you have to learn to deal with it. So never ever give up and remeber i will allways be there to help you in the toughest times.
Answer:
B. mainly
Explanation:
The repeated word in the first paragraph that is an intensifier and actually emphasizing the fact that the story of Huck Finn is more fiction than fact is mainly.
Intensifier is known to be a word that actually strengthens or weakens another word close to it in a sentence.
From the passage, we discover that the author repeated the word "mainly" and not just that but also repeated the sentence bearing the word "mainly".
Here it is:
<em>"...he told the truth, mainly" </em>(Line 4) and
<em>"mainly he told the truth" </em>(Line 5).
We can then infer that actually not everything in the book is the fact. As the author repeats the word, "mainly", he tends to reiterate that not everything in the story is true; there is something fictitious.
So, the correct answer is mainly.