1. <span>d-Phrases like “worst choice ever” and “too silly” convey her frustration.
The narrator's frustration with her brothers, and the fact that she blames them for part of ruining her vacation is clear here.
2. </span><span>consuming
Eating is a very bland word, it doesn't give much indication on how hungry she was or excited she was about the food. Consuming is equally as bland a word.
3. </span><span>The language shows the author's biases.
Word choice throughout this piece shows the extreme emotional bias the narrator has towards the vacation. </span>
Involving the condition that a group of quantities connected by operators gives the same result whatever the order of quantities involved.
Answer:
Friendship is considered to be valuable but not necessarily vital.
In “Society and Solitude” Ralph Waldo Emerson portrays how he feels that the independence can strengthen friendships. On the other hand, In “Nature” Emerson shows that the friend are trivial, that even when between the people exist close bounds each person is ultimately alone, in both text he considers the friendship trivial.
IDK i think it's B......?
Hi Aarroy,
Who is your favorite fictional character? It doesn't have to be someone from a classic novel unless your teacher specified. It can be a character from a movie you love etc.
In order to write a "descriptive" paragraph, all you have to do is describe the character you choose using vivid language. For instance, if I was writing about Darcy from Pride and Prejudice I could write;
<em>"He has silvery blue eyes and an intimdating stature."</em> etc.
Just write about your character's appearance as well as his personality.
Metaphors are comparisons that do NOT use <u>like</u> or <u>as</u>. For instance, I could write:
<em>"Darcy's personality is an onion; with an outward appearance that first appears cold but whose inner layers reveal his insecure and fragile nature."</em>
I know that sounds like a mouthful, but I am comparing Darcy's personality to an onion without using like or as, which is a metpahor.