If they didn't exist there would be chaos.
You would be dead.
I would be dead.
Everyone killing them selves.
It's gonna be like the purge, people stealing, people killing.
There would be no laws, rules or regulations regarding the environment. Crimes would be committed, and there would be no punishment or rehabilitation.
The statement that best expresses why the author most likely includes the last paragraph in this excerpt is:
- C. To create a sense of tension about Maggie's decision to leave home
<h3>What is a sense of tension?</h3>
Tension is used by authors to keep readers glued to a story or to raise their expectations and hopes.
In the last paragraph of the excerpt from "A Good Place for Maggie," the speaker raised the tension of the readers by talking about the rising cost of gas that Maggie experienced as she made tried to leave home. That piece of information was added to generate tension.
Learn more about tension in a text here:
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This would definitely be FALSE. Being able to distinguish the subjects and objects will help you to avoid confusion on which verb or pronoun to use. We always follow the rules in subject-verb agreement as well as the pronoun-antecedent rules. Knowing either the subject is plural or singular will give you an idea on what verb to use. Same goes with the antecedents and pronouns to use.
The answer is :
D) It emphazises death and hell
We can observe that although the author could have simply finished the story in a conventional way he opted for adding an epigraph in order to highlight the concept of deaths and hell (and society's -mis-conceptions of both)
Hope this helps!
Well On Writing is about Stephen Kings Life as a writer and serves as a book that guides people who would like to indulge in writing themselves. Edgar Allan Poe's book The Philosophy of Composition is about how good writers write and kind of gives a brief synopsis about how a good writer should write. So therefore I believe they both address, Writers craft, or how a write should write!