Answer:
Sometimes if you do community service it can go on your record. It can help you out too and get you some type of points in high school.
Explanation:
<u>Answer:</u>
<em>The most effective way to vary the sentence patterns in the passage is to begin sentences with different parts of speech. </em>
<em>Option D is the correct answer. </em>
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<u>Explanation:</u>
After reading and observing the passage, it is evident that the word ‘pug’ is repeated in every line. Using the same noun in different sentences that are talking about the same subject, makes the sentence formation clumsy. It can be easily replaced by a pronoun (parts of speech) after its use in the starting sentence. Also, the sentences would sound better.
Part A: The fear of his great-uncle pulling his hair was gone.
Part B: "the dawn of a new era to me" and "on wich they were finally cropped from my head".
Answer:
D. My grandmother has already read that detective novel.
The ninth line of the sonnet brings in a major change of tone. Shakespeare jumps on elaborating the immortality of his lover rather than continuing the criticism of the sun. Moreover, the limitations of nature are replaced by his lover’s thoughts and he claims that his darling is not bounded by the rules that are being displayed.
In line-4, the summer is stated as ”eternal summer”, since it keeps returning every year. And noticing from the previous personifications employed in the sonnet, we can easily recognize the similarity between “summer’s day” and “thee”. Both can be eternal or can fade with time. This is the major reason why the author takes a turn on line-9, as both of them have only one threat-time; and the third force that can eternalize them both is the poetry that the author has created.
To conclude, we can easily notice the turn in topic and breaking of the stanza.