I agree that mass media helps to shape people's ideas. When people see what is happening in the world, they want to be a part of the talk and they start spreading their opinions. Thts all I got I'm sorry
Siegfried Sasson illustrates the dramatic transformation most soldiers went through after experiencing World War 1. Englishmen like Sasson initially thought themselves as involved in a heroic effort to defend liberalism and the British a hellish and pointless nightmare. Intellectuals like Paul Valery were also disillusioned by the war, and many feared that the West and its liberal values would not long survive. In the essay below, he makes allusion to the scene in which Hamlet ponders mortality while studying the skull that is all that remains of a man he had known in life.
They were walking through the hall and she fell down on someone sat on them and fell back....
A dilated vessel with high blood volume
The answer to your question would be that the statement about quotation marks that is true is the one that reads as follows: "Quotation marks set apart short quotations" and "commas used to introduce short quotations appear outside the quotation marks" (I and III)
Short quotations should be sorrounded by quotation marks and usually followed by a parenthetical in-text citation. What is more, the commas introducing the quote should be outside the quotation marks. Take the following example:
a) However as one researcher points out, "science can be seen as an ideal and altruistic activity conducted for the best of mankind, where knowledge is in itself a value" (Simonsen, 2012, p. 46).