Sentence 10: '<span>Sadly, even after that water is found, only some of its clean and safe enough to drink.'
The word "its" in this sentence needs an apostrophe to become "it's". The sentence, without the contraction, would read "only some of it is clean", so when you put "it is" together, there needs to be an apostrophe. "Its" without an apostrophe becomes possessive (ex. a country needs its water), which does not make sense in the context of this question.
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Answer:
The difference between end rhyme and internal rhyme is where the rhyming words are placed.
Explanation:
In end rhyme, the rhyming words are placed at the end of two consecutive sentences. For example:
There once was a man who wasn't very smart.
For instance, he once tried to drive a shopping cart.
Internal rhyme, however, is different. There are three types of internal rhyme. The first is having two or more rhyming words appear in the same line. For example:
I went to town to buy a gown. / I took a car, it wasn't far.
Internal rhyme can also be two or more rhyming words in the middle of two consecutive sentences. For example:
I hear the seas calling my name, / the birds and bees beckoning me.
Finally, it can also be an ending word rhyming with a word in the middle of the next line. For example:
I once went to a soccer arena . / The teams were Argentina and Spain.
Hope this helps! I dont know what poem your talking about but hope you get it after this.
La Des esa espero que te ayude
Rising Action is the event leading up to the climax
Answer:
B He ended the section with the words, "But then--"
Explanation:
The writer of "The crossover" builds suspense by heightening tension about not knowing what next would happen by ending the section with an incomplete sentence "But then--".
Kwame Alexander keeps the readers hooked when he ends the section of Josh playing with his father by not completing a sentence, therefore making the readers not know what next to expect.