As for this question, when you want to thank someone for the help, it all depends on how that someone has helped you and if the manner that you were helped would also come in as a factor.
When there is immediate contact between the helper and the one being helped, the most direct way to thank someone is to vocalize it and say it to that person that gratitude that you wanted to express. Other ways would be to return the favor to that person. Most people prefer them to be of equal or more than the value of the help given at the moment. If there is no such available way, then what others tend to do is to remain in debt for that person. So when the time comes that the person needs help, they can readily assist and offer the help they needed.
Since Gatsy first met Daisy, five years have passed because he has been away at war and then involved in business to make the money he believes he needs to win Daisy's love. Not until he is rich does he arrive at West Egg. In the meantime Daisy has married Tom Buchanan and had a daughter, Pammie. Gatsby also threw huge parties hoping that Daisy would one day stumble across the party. He even bought a house across from hers.
I, me, mine, my. These all apply to first person, or to someone's dialogue.
Spring is the beginning of seasons chaucer is describing the beginning of the tale
Answer:
<u>The following are the correct answers to each question</u>:
<u>Question 1: Option C.</u> The descriptive details reveal the excitement of the crowd.
<u>Question 2: Option A.</u> The passage uses dialogue to show how Mr. Frank feels. His words reveal his desire to protect Anne from reality.
Explanation:
The descriptive details on the paragraph of question 1 allow sensory recreations of the whole experience of a swimming race event. The writer uses the descriptive details to reveal the excitement of the crowd, with phrases such as :"Spectators slid to the front of their chairs; many rose."
The paragraph from question 2 is from "The Diary of a Young girl" and is a dialogue between Anne and her father. The use of a dialogue helps to portrait how Mr. Frank feels about the situation his and his family are living, and how he wants to protect Anne from that reality. He says to her not to worry, that he will take care of everything and how she just must enjoy her carefree life.