The answer is Miss Stacy<span> ... who </span>will<span> study every day after school to prepare for the </span>entrance exam<span> to Queen's ... They study for an hour every day, but begin to lose </span>their<span> drive when spring comes and the other </span>students<span> leave school early every day</span>
Answer:
To create suspense, writers must reveal details gradually so readers want more.
Explanation:
Lee Child's "A Simple Way to Create Suspense" is an essay where he narrates or rather expressed his take on creating suspense in his works. The essay provides his approach to making a suspenseful work rather than directly approaching the climax in a story.
In the given paragraph from the end of his essay, he states that there are numerous ways to make work interesting. He agrees that <em>"Attractive and sympathetic characters re nice to have; and elaborate and sinister entanglements are satisfying .... [added with] impossible-to-escape pits of despair"</em>. But all these are<em> "luxuries"</em> which provide not enough thrill. Rather, he opines that<em> "the slow unveiling of the final answer" </em>is the basic narrative fuel of any work.
Thus, the <u>central idea of the passage is that writers must reveal details slowly and gradually so that the readers will want more, creating a suspenseful environment.
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Answer:
Car:tire as cat:paw
Explanation:
I would say "paw" is the correct analogy to a cat because a tire to a car helps the car move and is on the bottom of a car in a sense. Therefore, a paw to a cat is as vital as a tire to a car in the sense of mobilization.