Answer:
C) Keep it, because it previews the way the rest of the passage will support the thesis about Hale’s authorship with evidence.
Explanation:
The writer should keep the underlined portion of the sentence because, as a thesis statement, it previews the line of reasoning of the passage. With the underlined text included, the writer makes it clear that the rest of the passage will provide strong evidence to support Hale’s authorship of the poem and discredit the idea that Sawyer inspired the poem.
Answer: He is talking about inequlity and slavery. I beleiev that he is syaing that we can't always take the nice route. We can't always be soft to get our point across and that sometimes you will have to get mean and violent to be heard.
Explanation:
In compound sentence, there are two independent clauses that are joined using a coordinator. While in complex sentence, there are two or more clauses with one essentially an independent clause while there can be on or more dependent clauses. The difference between compound and complex sentence is that there is no dependent clause in compound sentence and at least there is one dependent clause in complex sentence.
1. After Bill Sykes killed Nancy, he was on the run, but after police identified him as travelling with a dog, he attempts to drown the dog to rid himself of a companion, as well as deeming himself less of a suspect.
2. Bill Sykes killed Nancy.
3. Edward Leedford
4. I don’t know this one!
5. Mr Brownlow.
6. He shoots her in the head, but this only grazes her forehead, so he picks up a club and beats her on the wound until she dies.
7. Agnes Fleming (his dead mother), Edwin Leeford (his dead father) and Edward Leeford (his dead half brother).
8. She steals her gold locket, the only clue to Oliver’s identity.
9. She rejects him for fear that marriage to her may harm his career in church.
10. Bill Sykes.
I answered all of them apart from one I didn’t know, so I hope this helps!
Probably personification. It's giving an inanimate object (the bell) human qualities (peeping slyly)