This sentence is incorrectly punctuated, therefore the answer is false. This sentence is considered a run on sentence, which means that it keeps going without adding the nessary punctuation. "Huckleberry Finn was an excellent book; it told of a raft journey down the Mississippi." This is a correctly punctuated sentence.
Oooh oooh oooh! Flowers & food! Oooh oooh oooh! Flowers & food! This is a story how meat got baked dude! The fire was fly'in through the sssskkkkkyyyyyy, and the flowers turned to herbs, and the cattle was out front when the fire came down and cooked the meat up! That was how the food turned out and now we sing this sing in memory of those who died for our lunch. OOOH OOOH OOOH! FLOWERS & FOOD! (Ba-da BA!)
I hope this helps! :P =D
This question is taken from a short story "We will Mash you",which is about Charle's miserable fate at school. Charles was feeling dread of returning as he drove away from the school at the end of the story. The moral of this story was that a tough school is the building ground for a strong character.
Answer:
Sonnets are fourteen lines, as is sonnet 130; this allows Shakespeare to list several qualities of his mistress, then conclude with a couplet that turns the rest of the sonnet on its head. Sonnets have ten syllables per line, as does sonnet 130; this makes the poem read cleanly, with each thought given the same amount of weight in the poem. There are no structural oddities, like shorter or longer sentences, just the steady flow of beautiful poetry. Sonnets are written in iambic pentameter; this makes the singsongy feel of the poem as it compares each attribute of the woman with a quality found in nature
Explanation:
Just in my opinion:
1. True
2. True
3. False
4. True
5. True
6. True