During those months Rachel's mother looked after Aaron with something close to genuine fondness-- not pity, not obligation-- as though Aaron had become the son she always wanted.
This sentence flows very nicely and also makes sense. You can see that the punctuation is proper, the sentence makes sense, and the grammar is correct. With that in mind, that it the correct sentence structure.
Where are the options to choose from as a response to the question?
The best graphic organizer to use to better understand a definition passage is a Venn diagram an idea web a timeline an illustration hierarchy
Yes.
An abstract noun is a noun which denotes a quality, idea, or state of being and not a physical object.
This means that "knowledge" is an abstract noun.