1. Have you ever travelled abroad?
2. Granny and grandad lived here all their lives
3. Has anyone fed the dog?
4. I haven’t seen you for ages!
5. She makes millions from sports sponsorship deals
6. Did you check your essay for mistakes?
7. We haven’t won a match for two years!
8. You have asked me the same question three times
I believe the answer is myths.Hope this helps. (ノ◕ヮ◕)ノ*:・゚✧
the author's perspective on the topic and audience
In literary contexts, the tone frequently refers to the feelings that a book may provoke in the reader and the mood that an author portrays through word choice. A writer might elicit various emotions and points of view by using a particular tone when writing. In writing, the tone can also take on a variety of language forms, from terse to prosaic.
The words, sentences, and literary methods used by the author all have an impact on the overall tone of the book. The tone of a piece of writing frequently conveys the author's perspective on both the audience and the subject. For instance, every author approaches the same subject uniquely.
Learn more about tone here
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In "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe, the British colonized Africa by converting lower class people and outcasts to Christianity, bought their own form of government ("But apart from the church, the white men had also brought a government.") and even imprisoned men of higher titles for acts that are illegal under British law "... Some of these prisoners had thrown away their twins ..." The British were able to conquer some areas such as Abame, and in Umuofia they had turned the men against each other with their influence. As Obierika says to Okonkwo, "... Now he has won our brothers, and our clan can no longer act like one. He has put a knife on the things that held us together and we have fallen apart.”
Answer:
1. The
2. an; an
Explanation:
1. <u>The</u> boy slipped on the floor.
The should be used as the relevant article when the noun in the sentence is specific and the only one being referred to as is the case with the boy in this sentence.
2. There is<u> an</u> apple and <u>an</u> orange in the basket.
As both apple and orange begin with vowels or rather have a vowel like sound, the relevant article will be ''an'' because this is the article to be used when referring to vowels.