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Maurinko [17]
2 years ago
5

What is the ultimate irony of the crucible?

English
1 answer:
navik [9.2K]2 years ago
8 0
<span>In 'The Crucible', Arthur Miller uses situational, dramatic, and verbal irony, which, in the literary context, is the unexpected, to add comic relief, suspense, and intensity to some of the most dramatic scenes.</span>
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Make a list of five things you would like to do, in order of importance
Dmitry_Shevchenko [17]

1. Travel around the world.

2. Ride a cruise.

3. Go fishing.

4. Read some French Poetry.

5. Binge-watch some Netflix shows.

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1 year ago
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Plis help I dont know English​
marshall27 [118]
#2 should be “do your parents drink orange juice?”
And
#3 is “does your mother go to the supermarket?”
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#4 is “does your father cook dinner?”
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Which branch of the Nazi government managed the camps?
Anton [14]

Answer:

the SS managed the camps

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3 years ago
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NEED HELP ASAP
Dimas [21]

Explanation:

the main idea is the key concept. the details help the main idea with who, what , where, when mayor or small. sorry that's all I can think of

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3 years ago
13. Choose either adverbial, noun, or relative for each kind of italicized subordinate clause in the sentence.
enot [183]

Answer:

Independent clause: An independent clause can stand alone as a sentence. It contains a subject and a verb and is a complete idea.

I like spaghetti.

He reads many books.

Dependent clause: A dependent clause is not a complete sentence. It must be attached to an independent clause to become complete. This is also known as a subordinate clause.

Although I like spaghetti,…

Because he reads many books,…

Subject: A person, animal, place, thing, or concept that does an action. Determine the subject in a sentence by asking the question “Who or what?”

I like spaghetti.

He reads many books.

Verb: Expresses what the person, animal, place, thing, or concept does. Determine the verb in a sentence by asking the question “What was the action or what happened?”

I like spaghetti.

He reads many books.

The movie is good. (The be verb is also sometimes referred to as a copula or a linking verb. It links the subject, in this case "the movie," to the complement or the predicate of the sentence, in this case, "good.")

Object: A person, animal, place, thing, or concept that receives the action. Determine the object in a sentence by asking the question “The subject did what?” or “To whom?/For whom?”

I like spaghetti.

He reads many books.

Prepositional Phrase: A phrase that begins with a preposition (i.e., in, at for, behind, until, after, of, during) and modifies a word in the sentence. A prepositional phrase answers one of many questions. Here are a few examples: “Where? When? In what way?”

I like spaghetti for dinner.

He reads many books in the library.

Explanation:

4 0
2 years ago
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