1. The aesthetic qualities of words shape a passage's D. style. Aesthetics has to do with beauty, so style is the most plausible answer.
2. The style of a passage determines how D. aesthetic quality <em />is presented. This is just a rephrasing of the first sentence.
If the options provided are <em>does, ran, goes, done, </em>then we have to take into consideration the first pair of the words. They are both used in the same form, past participle. That means that our answer has to have the same form as the word <em>did. </em>The only such word is ran. They are both past tenses, whereas <em>does </em>and <em>goes </em>are present, and <em>done </em>is past participle.
Answer:
C). The word takes an opposite meaning.
Explanation:
A Prefix is defined as a morpheme that is added at the beginning of a root word to modify its meaning. The root fortunate gives the meaning 'auspicious, favored by fortune, or having by good luck' while the prefix 'un-' means 'not, negative, lacking, or absent.' Thus, the addition of the prefix 'un-' to the word 'fortunate' reverses its meaning in the paragraph and it conveys the opposite sense i.e. 'not favored by fortune or resulting in misfortune.' Therefore, <u>option C</u> is the correct answer.
Answer:
Low-fidelity prototypes are often paper-based and do not allow user interactions. ... High-fidelity prototypes are computer-based, and usually allow realistic (mouse-keyboard) user interactions. High-fidelity prototypes take you as close as possible to a true representation of the user interface.