Explanation:
They are the author's memories and impressions with the man he based Life of Pi off of. If you read the introduction(which is all in italics) he talks about how he came to write the book, and one thing the author mentions is the first meeting of real-life Piscine.
Answer: Margo was over the moon when she hit her first home run in softball.
Over the moon is an idiom.
:)
Answer:
often and home.
Explanation:
Explanation: an adverb is a word or a group of words that modifies or qualifies an adjective, verb, or other adverb, expressing a relation of place, time, circumstance, manner, cause, degree, etc. In the given sentence, we can see two adverbs that modify the verb "brings", the first one is "often" it is and adverb of time (it indicates when the action happened), and the second one is "home" it is an adverb of place (it indicates where the action happened).
Hello. You forgot to enter the answer options. The options are:
The author's name
The name of the article
The name of the encyclopedia
The date you looked up the information
Answer:
The author's name
Explanation:
The list of "works cited" is the section where you can find all the texts and other types of media that were used as a basis to compose the work you just read. All items on this list contain an information pattern, starting with the author's last name, followed by the author's first name, followed by the title of the article, followed by the name of publication, followed by the publication date, followed by date accessed.
Thus, we can say that what would appear first in the list of works cited would be the name of the author.
People have often wondered if William Shakespeare had any involvement in the most important writing project of his time, the translation and prepartation of the King James Bible. Although there are no ways to verify this, at least one set of clues indicates Shakespeare probably had some involvement with at least the Old Testament part of the book.
William Shakespeare lived from 1564-1616. The creation of the King James Bible began in the year 1610, the year in which Shakespeare would have been 46 years old.
If you turn to Psalm 46 in the King James Bible, and if you count exactly 46 words into the psalm, you find the word "shake." If you count 46 words back from the end of that psalm, you will find the word "spear."
It just seems too coincidental to think that it was by fluke circumstances that the 46th Psalm would be translated around the time of Shakespeare's 46th birthday and that the 46th word from the start and the 46th word from the end would be "shake" and "spear." My professional opinion is, Shakespeare translated that section of the King James Bible and he slipped in a secret byline to prove it was his work.
Dr. Dennis E. Hensley is director of the professional writing department at Taylor University in Upland, Indiana. He holds four degrees in linguistics and literature, including a Ph.D. in English from Ball State University. He is the author of 52 books.