Five Elements of Fiction
-Plot
-Setting
-Character
-Point of View
-Theme
Plot: how the author arranges events to develop the basic idea
it is the sequence of events in a story or play.
The plot is a planned, logical series of events having a beginning, middle, and end.
<span>Cassius's wish to remain at Sardis and battle the forces of Marc Antony and Octavius there, rather than at Philippi, demonstrate the impression that he did not want to risk his army to lose a single fight and that he was thinking about his soldiers. He wanted that his soldiers are in good condition to fight a heavy battle rather than risking their lives with little preparedness. However, it also implies his cowardice and fear of being captured because of losing the battle.</span>
"..arrived in the Bay de Todos los Santos, or All Saints’ Bay, in about twenty-two days after."
Answer: It's C
The sentence that has a dangling modifier error is the following one: After seeing a movie about overflowing landfills, a new program for recycling was started in our town. The modifier used at the beginning of this sentence should be modifying the speaker of the sentence as the ones who watched the movie about overflowing landfills.
Answer:
Everyone, nobody.
Explanation:
Indefinite pronouns are those pronouns used in places of names or a specific person or thing. They do not specify what the pronoun is, nor do they provide any indication of what the pronoun represents. They replace the nouns but do not provide any indication of what nouns they stand for.
In the given sentence, we can use the indefinite pronoun "<em>everyone</em>" and "<em>nobody</em>" as the sentence is in the contrasting side of each other. So, the new sentence will be-
Suzy loves to bake cookies for her family. <em><u>Everyone </u></em>loves them, but <em><u>nobody </u></em>helps her clean up.
This shows that while all the members of the family loves her cookies, only few of them help her clean up. Also, the indefinite pronouns are in the singular form as the corresponding verb is in the present tense.