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Answer:</h2>
<em>Consequently and as a consequence are linking words which link reasons with results. They are common in formal writing. This is the fourth time that this has happened and, consequently, we can't accept further watches from you.</em>
<em>hope</em><em> </em><em>this</em><em> </em><em>help</em><em>!</em><em> </em>
The word "smiling" is a verb that functions as an
adjective.
“They scrambled to their places by the rowlocks / and all in line dipped oars in the gray sea” (Homer 6-7).
In-text MLA citations should include the author's last name and page number when available. The citation must be after the quotation, but outside of the quoted text. The citation should be in parenthesis and not include a comma between the author's last name and page number. The comma is extraneous. In order to make it clear that the parenthetical citation belongs to the quoted text and not the sentence following, there needs to be a comma after the citation - not before.
I’m guessing before and finally?
<span>A theme Wallace Stevens goes back to over and over is that the defining factor of the world we live in isn't really the world itself, but the way we perceive it. We see the world the way we are, not the way it is.
This is the main theme in Anecdote of the Jar, and Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird; it is probably the main theme of The Blue Guitar. It is an important theme even in poems which have other main messages, including The Emperor of Ice Cream and Sunday Morning. </span>