Answer:
1. could
2. should
3. can
4. could
5. might
6. can
7. must
8. manage
9. might
10. could
11. should
12. should
13. might
14. must / ought to
These are only suggested others are suitable for some too, I just think these make more sense.
Hope this helps :)
Hello, so this seems to be a basic essay! Which is good news. First, pick your argument/ topic choice one that you feel you relate to and one that you can easily covey your message to the reader. You seemed to have six really great choices to choose from so thank your teacher for that! All you need to do is get all of your information and create a outline. One that shows all of you reasoning and facts. It looks like you have all the information that you need in the pictures you have. Unfortunately, I can’t write this for you but trust me I would love to! Let me know if you need any further help with anything at all. Good luck on you essay!
In the text it says, "She taught me my scales and exercises, too, on the little parlor organ", "I struggled with the 'Harmonious Blacksmith'", and "<span>I had been doggedly beating out some easy passages from an old score of 'Euryanthe'". The boy mostly practiced scales and exercises, but he also played "Harmonius Blacksmith" and "Euryanthe".</span>
A)the crow flew to the south when the crow was tired
b)the crow stopped when he landed in a tree
c)the boy is small which he was playing outside
d)crow grabbed the ball of daylight when he flew away
Answer: London uses the third-person omniscient point of view to give readers as much information as possible about all of the characters.
Explanation:
<em>White Fang </em>is a novel written by <em>Jack London</em> about a wolfdog of the same name and chronicles its life from violent upbringings to finding a family that loves him.
In the book Mr. London used a third-person omniscient point of view which is when the narration is not coming from a single character but rather can see and know all the events going on in the book including the innate feelings in the characters. This enabled Jack London to give as much information as possible about all the characters.