Answer:
The title often suggests the message the author wants to send.
Explanation:
the title does not always include the names of main characters, and you obviously cannot tell what to expect from the plot or the tone of the work by a title, so the answer is the title often suggests the message the author wants to send.
Answer:yes
Explanation:
You could include the ingredients in a separate sentence
The excerpt that shows the low self-esteem of the
soldiers and their belief that being a soldier has nothing to do with bravery
from Ernest Hemingway's "In Another Country," is the sentence “ The
three with the medals were like hunting-hawks; and I was not a hawk, although I
might seem a hawk to those who had never hunted; they, the three, knew better
and so we drifted apart.”
The correct answer is:
- Central Ideas are only found in literary works.
Explanation:
<em>The central idea is the principal message the author wants the reader to understand and remember</em>. <u>It is a complete sentence that explains what the text is about</u><u> </u>and<u> ties together all of the information given in all types of texts (literary works, informative works, etc)</u>. <u>The central idea also known as main idea is doesn't have to be stated in the text</u>, it can be implied through the information given so the reader has to discover it.