Answer:
What trait do autobiography and memoir have in common? They both use the first-person point of view. They both blend historical accuracy with fiction. They both portray the entire life of the author.
Answer:
1. I always ch*at online while <u><em>doing</em></u> my homework, <u><em>making</em></u> my parents really angry. I tell them I can do both, but I just can't get through to them!
2. | didn't do much this weekend. I was at home <u><em>arguing</em></u> with my brother. He can annoy me by just by <u><em>looking </em></u>at me! Is that normal?
3. A friend lent me a presentation <u><em>saved</em></u> on a flash drive. It <u><em>being</em></u> her only copy, she told me to be really careful, but I accidentally reformatted the flash drive, <u><em>meaning</em></u> the presentation's gone. Any advice?
4. There's a group of students at school <u><em>calling</em></u> me names. And when I got home today, there were some really terrible comments <u><em>posted</em></u> on my page. I felt really upset after <u>readin</u>g them. What's the best way to stand up for yourself in these situations?
"The domesticated generations fell from him" means that Buck is losing his civilized characteristics (B).
In this passage, Buck is feeling more and more estranged from where he and his ancestors ("generations") originally come from: as he gets a taste of wild life, he feels less and less like a pet ("domesticated") and more like a feral dog or a wolf. He is forgetting his stay-at-home ways ("fell from him") and sees new instincts grow in him, such as the drive to fight and hunt in a pack.
"Friday is the best day of the week" is an opinion
<span>
D) Chopin uses a simile to compare how quickly the
Aubigynys fall in love to a pistol shot.</span>
Similes are comparisons using the words “like” or “as” in
order to give readers a better sense of understanding when there may otherwise
be little understanding or not the understanding a writer wishes to convey.
What this means is that authors will compare something that may not be known to
readers to something that most likely will be known in order to present the
best image understood by the most readers. Because not everyone may have
the same perspective of just how quickly the Aubigynys fall in love, the use of
a simile would work well. As such, to describe something that might be
known to readers (a pistol shot) and compare that to the quickness of their
falling in love, the readers may begin to understand just how quickly they fall
in love.