Answer:
The Seven Learning Styles – How do you learn?
Visual (Spatial)
Aural (Auditory-Musical)
Verbal (Linguistic)
Physical (Kinesthetic)
Logical (Mathematical)
Social (Interpersonal)
Solitary (Intrapersonal)
Answer:
2
Explanation:
A stanza is a group of lines put together in a poem. It's something like a paragraph in a passage where lines are divided into groups. Here, the first stanza starts with "Who has seen the wind?" and ends with "The wind is passing through." and the second stanza starts with "Who has seen the wind?
" and ends with "The wind is passing by.".
It should be moved to the beginning of the sentence, that means, that it should be placed before "The motorcycles raced" (option A).
Explanation: "down the track" is a prepositional phrase. All prepositional phrases have no verbs nor subjects. These can be used as adjectives or adverbs. They can be placed either after the verb and at the begining of a sentence. When placed at the beginning of a sentence, it sounds more formal than the common structure composed of 'subject + verb + predicate' and this construction has to be followed by a comma.
In this case, the answer would be:
'Down the track, the motorcycles raced for the prize'.
Subjunctive mood is used for all the following except questions.
Hope this helps! :)
In "The Devil and Tom Walker," the narrator says that Old Scratch presided over the burial of treasure. His reference to Kidd reminds us of Captain William Kidd, who was a famous pirate about whom many legends are told. The reference to Kidd is a historical allusion. Historical allusion can be used in works of literature to refer to events or people in a way that makes the events or characters of a work more relatable.