Answer:
<em>Which option explains how to verify the meaning of an unknown word?</em>
<em>Hi, there! This Is a Tough Question As I Can See..</em>
<em>my Answer would be B. find the word in another sentence You can Determine the Meaning by using Context Clues Also.</em>
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Bloomberg
wants
to ban the the sodas because he probably thinks that a lot of bad things is happening
so he has decided to
ban the soda
Explanation:
i don't understand
Way 1 - Luke Stevens transports Lyddie and Charlie to
the village.
Way 2 - Luke offers to look after their farm and to
also look in on <span>Charlie.</span>
Answer:
Roald Dahl's 'The Landlady' is a dark and terrifying look at 17-year-old Billy Weaver's first and last stay at a bed and breakfast. After asking the porter for a recommendation, he opts for the boarding house, where the landlady looks good on the surface but has a dark secret tied to her taxidermy skills.
Explanation:
"Bakersfield," the old man said, "is my hometown." This one is correct. A fragment of the sentence is being separated by a comma, and then continuing after another comma. If the man had paused after Bakersfield and had proceeded to perform an action instead of "said," this one would have been wrong.
He never learned to tie his shoes, however he didn't need to, as he only wore sandals. This one is wrong. The word 'however' is not being used correctly and is in the wrong format. For this sentence to be correct, it would have looked like this: He never learned to tie his shoes; however, he didn't need to, as he always wore sandals. Remember that however more often times than not, can only be used when followed after a semi-colon.
"He isn't here," the somber gentleman mumbled, "I don't know when he will return." This one is wrong. "He isn't here" is a complete sentence, not a fragment of one. For this to have been right, it would have to have looked like this: "He isn't here," the somber gentleman mumbled. "I don't know when he will return." See the difference? There should have been a period after mumbled, so that he could continue onto his next sentence.
From the first line, "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife," Austen established an underlying irony to the tone of the novel. This one is correct. I at first believed it to be wrong, but I misread it. Here it uses the sentence structure where it gives an object a name. What I mean by this is if you said "My dog, Charles, went for a walk." You would use commas to separate the name you have now given your dog from the rest of the sentence. A pause, if you will. This is the same thing going on here, making the commas correct. The reason there is a comma after "wife" and not after the quotation marks is because you are not allowed to place punctuation after a quotation mark like that. They must ALWAYS be kept inside of your quotation marks.
Your correct sentences would be the first and last.