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Mazyrski [523]
3 years ago
5

Insert the two commas for 10 points

English
1 answer:
jasenka [17]3 years ago
5 0

Hi, the other person reported my answer and got it taken down, probably because they were being salty. The Brainly mods don't really seem to care.

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A writer makes fun of literary critics by "reviewing" an
Alex17521 [72]

Answer:

The correct answer is B. Parody.

Explanation:

A parody is a vulgar, exaggerated, or comic imitation of another work known to the public, through which the original work is ridiculed, even by small references to it. Broadly speaking, a parody is a sub-form of a satire: the story (the text or the image) is imitated in an ironic way. This can happen in a harmless as well as a corrosive way. The success of the parody will be greater the more famous the original and the parodied (magnified) elements are therefore more recognizable.

8 0
3 years ago
Do you agree or disagree with the ban on plastic bag usage? Explain. (Don't research. Just your thoughts. You can include the pr
sertanlavr [38]
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7 0
3 years ago
To what other emotions does Shakespeare tie love?<br> Why? What is he implying?
luda_lava [24]

Answer:

The ideas expressed by Shakespeare and Browning are still relevant today. Love is not a tangible thing; it is an emotion so it can be perceived in many different ways. Shakespeare has infamously used sonnets to express his ideas on love. 'Shall I compare thee…?' is a sonnet in which Shakespeare focuses on immortalisation through words.

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
Correct the paragraph. There are five mistakes.
WITCHER [35]

Answer:

Cross out did before invited

Comma after yesterday

Add "-ed" after visit

Add "-ed" after tour

Add "-ed" after watch

Add a comma after later

Cross out 'are'

Our corrected sentence should look like this;

<em>Hello from London. Our friends invited us here for a week. Yesterday, we visited Big Ben, and we toured Buckingham Palace. This morning, we watched a cricket match. Later, we walked around Piccadilly Circus and enjoyed coffee and sandwiches at a cafe.</em>

3 0
2 years ago
Use correlative conjunctions to combine the two sentences.
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I believe it’s

The puppy cannot sit, or stay for very long.
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