How does syntax emphasize the disturbing effect of the subject in these lines from "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe?
<u>The rambling style emphasizes instability.
</u><u />The narrator is obviously mad, and the way he speaks just makes his craziness all the more insane.
Answer:
past perfect progressive tense
Explanation:
<u><em>had</em></u>
Answer: The three correct options are:
1.Ariana got lost on the way to the festival; she ended up twenty miles from where we planned to meet.
3.Ariana got lost on the way to the festival, and she ended up twenty miles from where we planned to meet
4.Ariana got lost on the way to the festival. She ended up twenty miles from where we planned to meet.
Explanation: 1. Use a semicolon between two closely related independent clauses. 3. Use a comma before a coordinating conjunction such as <em>and, but, or, & yet. </em>4. Separate the two clauses into two sentences. Use a period at the end of the first sentence. Start the new sentence with a capital letter.
2. Is incorrect. It is an example of a "comma splice" where a comma is used instead of the other correct options.
I’m pretty confident the answer is C.
Auschwitz wasn’t just an extermination center, it was also a concentration camp.