A cause-and-effect relationship is signaled by the words "But since."
Answer:
The apartment itself is described as being small, "a small living-room, a small dining-room, a small bedroom, and a bath," and yet everything in this small apartment is described as being large: "tapestried furniture entirely too large" for the space and an "over-enlarged photograph" of a hen sitting atop a rock.
Explanation:
Answer:
A)Adam Alexander says some professers "are admant about banning them and include such prohibitions in clearly stated language on their syllabi"(82).
Explanation:
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Answer:
Explanation:
1. Bandwagon: It lets you do something because everybody does it.
2. Transfer: It uses famous people to promote someone or something without him/her saying something about the product.
3. Plain folks: It uses a simple or normal person to convince us to support someone or something.
4. Testimonials: It uses the testimony of a famous person or a celebrity to convince you to buy or do something.
5. Name calling: It gives positive information for your own point of view but none of the positive things on your opponent.
The answer here would be answer choice C. When reading this statement out loud, one can tell that there is a "gap" at the beginning between "he" and "is". It starts up an entirely new statement without any punctuation, so we can tell that this is the only place that our semicolon deserves to go.