As for this problem concerning about a transition between sentences and paragraphs, the most probable and most likely to be the answer out of the options presented would be the third one which is a bridge.
A transition serves as a bridge between sentences and paragraphs. Though they create a divide between them, these transitions do not necessarily indicate that the divide is to cause to present that the two aren't connected to each other. A summary and introduction wouldn't do since a transition functions more and effectively between sentences and paragraphs.
1) name
2) ask, are
3) wondered, built, using
4) constructed
5) considered
6) commissioned
7) survived
8) restored
9) built
10) set
11) estimated
12) made
13) survived, appear
14) destroy
15) housed
16) completed
17) destroy
18) look
19) agree
20) identified
Answer:
Explanation:
The term Gothic originates with the architecture created by the Germanic Goth tribes that was later expanded to include most medieval architecture. Ornate, intricate, and heavy-handed, this style of architecture proved to be the ideal backdrop for both the physical and the psychological settings in a new literary genre, one that concerned itself with elaborate tales of mystery, suspense, and superstition. While there are several notable precursors, the height of the Gothic period, which was closely aligned with Romanticism, is usually considered to have been the years 1764 to about 1840, however, its influence extends to 20th-century authors such as V.C. Andrews, Iain Banks, and Anne Rice.
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Here is the correct option: Brutus asks Lucius if he cried out during his sleep to check if he imagined the ghost of Caesar. Brutus wake up Lucius asking him why he cried out in his sleep. But Lucius replied that he was not aware that he cried out and that he did not see any ghost.
The events listed happened in this order: Lizabeth, Joey, and their friends were bored on a hot summer day and they decided to go to Miss Lottie’s house.The children threw pebbles at Miss Lottie, her flowers, and her son, John Burke. Then the children ran at her calling her a witch.
Lizabeth and Joey sneaked out of the house and went to Miss Lottie’s house. In a fit of rage, Lizabeth pulled up and trampled on all of Miss Lottie’s marigolds. Lizabeth finished and found Miss Lottie standing over her. Lizabeth realized she had destroyed something beautiful that belonged to someone else, and felt awkward and ashamed.