Answer:
1. across the sky
2. on the corner
3. with ice
4. Sophia
5. the mustangs
6. Star Wars
7. The main road was closed
8. She enjoyed her trip to Paris
9. The project that we submitted
10. My brother does his homework
Answer:For example, when you get those weird chewy caramel things on Halloween; given out of kindness but really no good. I'm thinking of something that is a "false gift", almost like the inverse of a blessing in disguise (which this thread discusses, but none of those are what I'm thinking of).
The intentionality of the giver is not so important as the properties of the thing itself: it is supposed to be good, but really isn't.
Explanation:
<span>The creates dramatic irony because the murderer Mary Maloney is asking the police to eat the murder weapon. ... Roald Dahl uses dramatic irony(a case when the reader knows something the characters don't) in “Lamb to the Slaughter” to develop a feeling of suspense in the reader, leaving them wanting more.
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They answer cannot be D, because the positioning of actors on the stage isn't one of Aristole's elements of drama.
It cannot be C, because costumes aren't a part of stage directions.
It can't be B, because costumes aren't a part of dialogue.
Therefore, the answer must be (A) staging, because it's the only one that includes them all.
The plural noun that is spelled correctly is A. roofs.
B should be - knives.
C should be - dictionaries.
D should be - monkeys.