Answer:
NONE of these sentences is written correctly.
Explanation:
corrections:
A. While Jonathan was napping, I finished doing the dishes. (the word 'while')
B. Although the lasagna looked terrible, it tasted wonderful. (the word 'although')
C. Ever since I was a teenager, I have loved going to the theater. (the word 'I')
D. Pepper and I decided it was time to head home. (the word 'decide')
To get to the bottom of something would mean that their is something mysterious going on, and that person wants to know everything about it as soon as possible. Its like saying that you would like to 'crack a code', or solve the case.
The sentence that uses semicolons correctly is, "Teenagers often attend school, have jobs, and participate in after-school activities; such as sports, theater, and band". A semicolon is used after the word activities to separate two different series of words in the sentence. To avoid confusion between the series that describes what teenagers often do, and the series of examples of after-school activities, the semicolon is being used.
Answer:
I’m good
Explanation:I had some really good food five minutes ago.
<span>
D) Chopin uses a simile to compare how quickly the
Aubigynys fall in love to a pistol shot.</span>
Similes are comparisons using the words “like” or “as” in
order to give readers a better sense of understanding when there may otherwise
be little understanding or not the understanding a writer wishes to convey.
What this means is that authors will compare something that may not be known to
readers to something that most likely will be known in order to present the
best image understood by the most readers. Because not everyone may have
the same perspective of just how quickly the Aubigynys fall in love, the use of
a simile would work well. As such, to describe something that might be
known to readers (a pistol shot) and compare that to the quickness of their
falling in love, the readers may begin to understand just how quickly they fall
in love.