The right answer is letter b: <em>the houses in both passages are described as having an air of rot, gloom and loneliness</em>.
Poe's character describes Mr. Roderick Usher's house as one he cannot help to consider a "melancholy view" where "there was an iciness, a sinking, a sickening of the heart" . Said house caused an "insufferable gloom" in the observer's spirit.
In a similar thread of thought, Bierce's tale about the Manton house describes its looks as sufficient to affirm it is<em> "haunted"</em>. He describes the house as <em>"slowly falling into decay"</em> as <em>"cobwebs weave in the angles of the walls like strips of rotting lace..."</em> all while standing <em>"a little way off the loneliest reach of the Marshall and Harriston road". </em>
Answer:
Use context clues.
Explanation:
Context clues are clues in the text around a word that help you find a word's meaning.
For a simple example, if the text says:
'"Which building should we go to?" asked Tim.
"Let's go to my house!" exclaimed Bob.'
Let's say you don't know what the word "building" means. Using context clues, you can find out that a house is a type of building, and so you have an idea of what a building may be.
Answer:
I think the answer would be "social"
Explanation:
I think this would be the answer because a grammatical name is the name given to a word, phrase or clause depending on its function in a given clause or sentence. There are several grammatical names such as noun phrase, adverbial phrase, adjective phrase, adjectival phrase, prepositional phrase, noun clause, adverbial clause and adjectival/relative clause. In this case i think the grammatical name is a clause meaning it has a subject and verb "man" being the subject and "understood" being the verb.
Sentence A correctly uses the possessive form.<em>
I was anxious to visit Nicole and Sofia's house because I rarely saw my cousins.
</em>
The Chicago Manual of Style says that “when two nouns “possess” the same entity, only the second takes an apostrophe (‘)” which is exactly the case in sentence A.
Both Nicole and Sofia own the same house.
Is there a list we can choose from? haha
that
whatever
whichever
and that