Answer:
the answer is A if Donna has a son and D if Donna does not have a son and Cujo is a dog
Explanation:
Answer:
B. Arundel High School is on Annapolis Road in Gambrills, Maryland; it is home to the Wildcats.
Explanation:
Choice A lacks a<em> verb </em>to connect the thought and <em>"high school" </em>is not capitalized here. It should be capitalized because its name is part of a school.
Choice C<em> didn't use the semicolon properly. </em>This punctuation is used when you are trying <em>to separate two independent clauses</em>. The second clause, <em>"home to the Wildcats"</em> is a dependent clause.
Choice D didn't use the conjunction "and" properly. When you're connecting two independent clauses with a conjunction, you should put a "comma" before the conjunction.
<u>It is only Choice B that is grammatically correct</u>. It made use of the semicolon properly. It connected two statements in order to prevent pause and to make it readable.
Answer:
He emphasizes the suspense of the story for the characters.
Explanation:
As stated, dramatic irony is when the <em>reader knows more than the characters.</em> In The Open Book, Crane uses this technique by telling the story from a third person, omniscient point of view. This allows the reader to have more information than the characters do.
For example, the moment in which the crew sees a "deserted village with dunes and empty cottages" creates suspense since the crew believes they will arrive by themselves there but actually there are a lot of people at the beach. The suspense created from this moment occurs because they are not sure where they'd go since there was no one in sight.
The correct alternative is letter B. Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, in 1954, was a very well known case judged by the Supreme Court of the United States which has decided to be unconstitutional all racial segregation in public schools in the United States. This decision has overturned a previous decision of 1986, in the Plessy v. Ferguson which had validated racial segregation in public areas in the US, such as schools, hospitals and bus and train stations.