Answer:
think you need to search this on Google please
11. comma
fault
The
sentence should have been:
<span>Like
a puppy, drawing attention to itself at every opportunity. </span>
12. none of the above
CORRECT:
Take the bread out of the oven; the crust is starting to burn.
13. seats,
and
14. horseshoes;
she
15. clocks,
nevertheless,
16. cool;
CORRECT:
The night was cool, yet we wrapped up in blankets, and we stayed warm.
17. course,
<span>CORRECT:
We have the data, of course; can we apply it to the theory? </span>
18. planned,
in fact,
CORRECT:
The class read the play and chose a scene to memorize; they planned, in fact,
to perform the scene for the school.
19. foundation,
however,
<span>20. bus;
he will need, therefore,</span>
When Hamlet refers to Ophelia as a nymph, this is an example of
C. Metaphor.
A methaphore consists of using a word or phrase to refer to something or somebody that it isn’t, invoking a direct similarity between the word or phrase used and the thing or person described
The website citations are formatted correctly are:
Greene, Tom. Home Composting. Hanover Growers Guild, 15 March 2010.
Web. 22 April 2011.
Lawson, Jennifer. Put Down the Pesticides. Organic Advocates, 31 May
2013. Web. 3 January 2014.
The appositive states what the subject has or does in a sentence