<u>Answer</u>:
"A: Cody is laughing
" is an inappropriate shift in the verb tense in the given sentence "Cody is laughing at Megan's joke when suddenly the phone went dead, He tries calling her back, but she is not answering."
<u>Explanation</u>:
The reference of the sentence is that Cody was laughing at Meghan’s joke, i.e. something happened in the past and the phone went dead. Now, when he is trying to call her back, she is not answering. The second part of the sentence when Cody is trying to call her again and she not answering is in present tense, so options B and C are in correct verb tense. Option D is also correct, because action happened in the past, so ‘went’ is used in “phone went dead”.
Incorrect verb tense is “Cody is laughing” as this action happened in the past and it should be “Cody was laughing”.
YOUR ANSWERS ARE CORRECT GOOD JOB!
Answer:
There was this one time where I had somehow gotten behind 1 weeks worth of assignments and a few of them were quizzes and some USA Test preps. I spent (what felt like) about 3 hours on just 1 USA Test prep, there where about 5 of them. After I finally got through those, I got started on the quizzes. A few of them were in my WORST subject: Math. Oh, yay.... T^T I spent basically the day trying to catch up on 1 weeks worth of school work. Not including scalping through some class recordings to find some answers to stuff, oh and having to beg for extra credit.
Explanation:
This is a real story and it makes me cringe thinking about it! Tweak this how ever you need to! I hope you ace the assignment! :D Wishing you luck!
Explanation:
Because it doesn't live under a rock... It melts from one. (mountains)
Answer:
A rhetorical analysis considers all elements of the rhetorical situation--the audience, purpose, medium, and context--within which a communication was generated and delivered in order to make an argument about that communication.
Explanation:
example? - Logos is the use of logic, facts, or truth. Pathos is the appeal to your audience's emotions. Ethos is the speaker or writer's character, credibility, and authority.