Comes straight from the Latin neuter noun summārium “abridgment, abstract, epitome,” an extremely rare word used only once in the surviving Latin literature by the Roman author, tragedian, statesman, and Stoic philosopher Seneca (the Younger) in one of his Moral Letters to Lucilius (39)
Answer: it leaves you trying to figure out whats happening
Explanation: For Example: your mom telling you, youre gonna get a nice suprise on your birthday but she doesnt tell you what the suprise is.
By leaving out a scene, it causes you to wonder and think about what's gonna happen next. Which often keeps the reader/viewer intrested in the movie/book.
Answer:
<h2>A.
</h2><h3>making an effort to remain focused</h3>
Explanation:
I hope this helps
The " 2) Although Sally was late as usual, she still made it in time for breakfast" sentence best demonstrates correct modifier/subject usage<span>. All sentences in the choices are the compounding sentence. A compounding sentence is a sentence formed by two related sentences. The first and the third sentence did not have enough subject to form a compounding sentence.</span>