I remember them switching houses and Country Mouse was like, "City's too loud for me!" and City Mouse was like, "Country's too quiet for me" so they went back to their own houses. I myself prefer the quiet country.
The correct answer is (b.) men's. The men's shouts filled the dark night. If you are referring to many male persons, you may use men. You need not any usage of s with men since men is already in a plural form which makes it wrong.
He's a human. he can behave how he feels
The answer is that the author has to bring to life a musical composition with only words.
Beethoven was a famous composer who had multiple works of art glossing mainly over piano, and orchestra. Explaining a piece of music to others, with only words would be, in other words. . . hard.
Hope this helps!!!
-The Scarlett Pimpernel
As a writer and reader I disagree with this. Perhaps if you are writing for a scientific journal or business report, long blocks of text can seem like you have a lot of info. Generally speaking, especially in fiction and non fiction i think unbroken pages of text will best case scenario bore a reader, worst case scenraio burden and overwhelm them with a lot of info so the feel daunted about continuing.