Answer: Ponyboy collapses at the lot, as his brothers and gang rush to help him. The next thing Pony remembers is waking up at home. He doesn't remember being in the hospital or being unconscious for three days, but he does remember that both Johnny and Dally are dead.
Explanation: if this didnt help you plz tell me and ill try again.
Answer:JULIET: I'll look to like, if looking liking move:
But no more deep will I endart mine eye
Than your consent gives strength to make it fly.
Explanation:
Answer:
In general, it possible to state that there is nothing fair about the lottery tradition in this case
Explanation:
In <em>The Lottery </em>by Shirley Jackson, to "win" the lottery means that someone in the family will be sentenced to death being stoned until the end. At the en of the story, after Bill Hutchinson draws a black dot in the first round of the game, which means that someone in his family will die in a really cruelty way. The real controversial part in the story, is that if it was not this family another one had to be, the practice itself is so cruel, no matter who the "winner" is. Someone has to die anyway.
From what I could find, Sirens are asking for help. The song they sing is a cry for help. They are described as acting/singing like a "damsels in distress".
Answers + Explanation:
1 - D (They are called indefinite because there is no clearly defined antecedent).
2 - E (While they look exactly like reflexive pronouns, intensive pronouns do not affect the meaning and are only used for emphasis).
3 - G (Interrogative sentences or phrases are, simply put, questions).
4 - B (Adjectives, i.e., noun-modifiers that can also be used as pronouns, e.g. "this" is an adjective in "take this bag" and a pronoun in "take this").
5 - A (<em>Each other</em> and <em>one another</em> are the only reciprocal pronouns in English and you use them when an action is mutual).
6 - C (Identifying relative pronouns is essential to understand relative clauses).
7 - F (You make a compound pronoun by adding -self to the object pronoun when the subject of an action and the object are the same).