<span>Yes, it certainly can be when it's properly punctuated.
The statement looks back on a day last week, when the teacher was grading
essays written by James and John. It tells of one particular sentence in the
essays, almost identically worded in both essays, except for one word difference.
<span>James ... while John had had "had" ... had had "had had". "Had had" had had
a better effect on their teacher.</span></span>
She disagreed with exclamation, She looked at him with despair as he hit her. He keep on touching her as if she was being understimated.Then he looked at her right in her eyes and believed in her. ( I am not quite sure if that was all the information they gave you but if it is, I gave you my version of this) (which pretty much it's what you have to do when you paraphrase) Hope I helped!
I would say a. that makes more sense
Answer:
B. Theme
Explanation:
The theme of an author's work is evident throughout the entire story. It drives the actions of each character and gives a deeper meaning to each.
For example, Shakespeare's classic play <em>Macbeth </em>holds the theme of "ambition left unchecked can lead to destruction." This is something we see throughout the entire play, and how it leads to main character Macbeth's downfall.
In my opinion, the correct answer is <span>D) Both use strict meter. Frost uses blankverse - unrhymed iambic pentameter, whereas Burgess uses iambic tetrameter (four iambic feet, as in the model da DUM da DUM da DUM da DUM). Only Burgess uses humorous language.</span>