I believe this depends solely on personal preference. A work of literature that you like may not be good to somebody else, so the way you feel about something makes it either good or bad. I believe I am pretty comfortable determining the quality of literature given that I have read a lot of books and have an overall grasp of each literary era throughout history. It can be easy to critique a text if you are knowledgeable enough about that particular era, style of writing, and general context, but it could also be quite difficult depending on the topic of that work.
The most obvious fault of this paragraph is the lack of punctuation marks. The entire paragraph is one sentence, when there are supposed to be periods, commas, and other punctuation marks to separate them. This makes this paragraph one run-on sentence, which is grammatically incorrect.
Answer:
A number cube labeled with numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 is tossed. What are the odds in favor of the cube showing an odd number?
My answer = 1:2
Answer:
By sympathizing with the young couple.
Explanation:
The whole story is narrated mainly in third person. There are a few times where the narration shifts into first person but the narrator does not seem to be another character in the story and does not expand his view beyond Della's.
The best option to this answer is B <span>Carl is tall; his brother is short.
</span>A semicolon is often used to merge two independent clauses (or two complete thoughts). [ex. my cat has brown fur; my dog has white fur.]