It was the best of times and the worst of times. They hated but they loved. She would pick on him and he’d retaliate. With a school project coming up, it made matters worse because they desperately but secretly wanted to work together. They got to crazy with eachother that they were forced together. So happy they were to work together and fall in love.
Answer: A. Extraordinarily important.
Explanation: Based on the information presented in the excerpt, we can infer that the information in the wireless message was extraordinarily important, because all the signs the characters give each other without even saying a word, like that the twitching of "Blinker's" eyes became more pronounced as he was reading the message and also the seriousness of de Grey while he delivered the message.
Answer:
She could use vocabulary games and flash cards.
Explanation:
The best way that Talia who encounters problems with words she does not understand when reading can improve her reading fluency is by using vocabulary games and flash cards.
A flashcard is a card that is used for learning that has information on either side of the card, bearing a question and answer.
Explanation:
Peter was tired when he arrived home because he caught up at dawn and he was driving for 10 hours
I want to get my car but it wasn't there when I park my car on a Yellow line it was towed away
Mick was a homeless beggar because he wasn't all this work he had a successful business but it went bust
last week John move to the house which he first soft while he was driving on holiday in Scotland jean and Peter arrived home when when they have hawked all the day and
Answer:
Roald Dahl used dramatic irony to create a suspenseful yet intriguing scene for the readers. It captures our attention and did it so well as to entice us to know what the ending will bring.
This dramatic irony makes the readers so engrossed in anticipation, eagerly awaiting the moment the crime may be solved.
Explanation:
In his story "Lamb to the Slaughter", Roald Dahl used dramatic irony to reveal the true events and to maintain the suspense. The dramatic irony is seen when the audience knows the happenings in the story but the characters have no idea about it.
Likewise, the police officers who came to investigate the death of their fellow detective Patrick Maloney who had been killed in his own home. As readers, we know that he was killed by his wife Mary with a <em>"leg of lamb"</em> that she was planning to make for dinner. Then, when the officers accepted to have dinner with their dead colleague's wife, they had the very same murder weapon for dinner, the <em>"piece of evidence" </em>that they need to prove the murder. The best scene is when they admitted the weapon may be <em>"right under our very noses"</em>, which it literally is, on their plates.
This dramatic irony provides huge suspense and also some hilarious results/ effects for the readers. It allows us to feel or see the side of the story that before the characters do, but more importantly it builds the suspense for how the story will end.