Hey there! I'm happy to help!
When you read a sentence and you hear the same sound at the beginning of a few consecutive words, that is called alliteration. This is a type of a figurative language where the beginning of each word has the same consonant sound at the beginning.
For example...
Jubilant jumping jaguars jump into the jester's jello.
In our problem, we see that is says "cleary confused". These both have the c sound at the beginning, so it is alliteration.
Have a wonderful day! :D
As a writer and reader I disagree with this. Perhaps if you are writing for a scientific journal or business report, long blocks of text can seem like you have a lot of info. Generally speaking, especially in fiction and non fiction i think unbroken pages of text will best case scenario bore a reader, worst case scenraio burden and overwhelm them with a lot of info so the feel daunted about continuing.
The correct answer to this question is letter "d: humans did not try to make fire." The statement that the author mean by "... nature had to kindle all the fires, for man by his own effort was unable to produce a spark" is that <span>humans did not try to make fire.</span>
It could be "you" or whoever the sentence is directed at, if that makes sense. If not, it could also be "trash and the bottles"
I’d write about how it started, how it impacted and changed the society