The correct answer is plot. Theme is the work's main idea (the "why" of the work), and there usually are more themes in a single work. Narrator is the "I" of the story, someone who tells it. The setting is the "when and where" of the story, the time-place frame. The plot is the "what" - what happens.
Answer:
reword, answer, cite, explain, and summarize
Explanation:
It's a writng strategy, sort of like for a rhetorical analysis essay:
Claim: what is the author of the text saying
Evidence: back it up with quotes/phrases from the text
Analysis: explain the quote and what you think the author's trying to say
For RACES, it'd be:
Restate the question (i think....)
Answer it (I think... because)
cite (from the given passage....)
explain (how does it all fit together? this is one of the most important parts of the strategy)
summarize (conclusion; not as important)
Hope this helps, and please mark me brainliest if it does!
Answer:
I don't know if you still need this but I thought it'd be fun to write anyway.
<em>I think that that writing is emotional</em>
<em>it is always new, always different</em>
<em>As long as it tells a story</em>
<em>Sometimes I feel more indifferent</em>
<em>When there's no theme.</em>
<em>When the event is insignificant.</em>
<em>I think writing is beautiful</em>
<em>Sometimes makes me incoherent</em>
<em>Because it's magnificent</em>
<em />
Don't know if this helps, the instructions were kind of unclear, but hoped this helped!
<em>Stay cold, </em>
<em>Brook</em>
Answer:
27.3 days
Explanation:
There really isn't much to explain, but I had to have more letters to submit the answer.
Answer:taxes are applied to some form of money received by a taxpayer. ... Corporate Tax - a percentage of corporate profits taken as tax by the government to fund federal programs. Sales Tax - taxes levied on certain goods and services.
When the economy is weak, for example, the Federal Reserve tries to boost consumer and business demand by cutting interest rates or purchasing financial securities. Congress, for its part, can boost demand by increasing spending and cutting taxes. Tax cuts increase household demand by increasing workers' take-home pay.
Government spends money for a variety of reasons, including: To supply goods and services that the private sector would fail to do, such as public goods, including defence, roads and bridges; merit goods, such as hospitals and schools; and welfare payments and benefits, including unemployment and disability benefit.
Explanation: