Punctuation marks are important for recognizing the end of a statement and or drawing some out with an ellipsis. If you do not put them at the end of your writing/sentence, unless using a question mark(?) or exclamation point(!), then the reader/grader will not be able to know where your sentence ends and the new one begins, therefor rendering it a run on sentence.
Answer:
That it can be fleeting and one should enjoy the moment
The narrator says of Clifford, "fate has no happiness in store for you" other than what he currently enjoys, so he should appreciate it
Explanation:
brainly.com/question/16561797
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Answer:
A lion is asleep in the middle of the jungle when suddenly a mouse runs over his paw by accident. The lion wakes up as he feels the mouse on his foot and threatens to eat the mouse. The mouse begs for his life, saying that if the lion frees him, the mouse will return the favor one day. The lion laughs at the idea that the mouse will manage to do something for him but decides to let him go. Time passes, the mouse hears the lion roaring in the jungle. The mouse goes to see what has happened and finds the lion trapped in a net. The mouse sets to work chewing through the net and eventually free the lion.
Answer:
In "Landscape with the Fall of Icarus," Williams's use of the word "unsignificantly" suggests:
D. that it is not important.
Explanation:
[...]
<u><em>unsignificantly
</em></u>
<em>off the coast
</em>
<em>there was
</em>
<em>
</em>
<em>a splash quite unnoticed
</em>
<em>this was
</em>
<em>Icarus drowning</em>
<em />
"Landscape with the Fall of Icarus" is a poem by author William Carlos William. The poem describes the painting by Pieter Brueghel of the famous mythological story. <u>The painting depicts the character, Icarus, falling from the sky into the blue water of the ocean after the wax wings he had used to fly with were melted by the sun. However, as both the poem and the painting make sure to highlight, no one notices Icarus's fate. The world simply goes on without any consideration for the suffering of poor Icarus. The ship that was sailing by keeps on sailing; that farmer that was ploughing keeps on ploughing. If the event does not affect them directly, people give it no importance.</u>
Answer:
D. the speaker enjoys this unexpected visit from the wind.