Answer:
After reading the passage, I see how the author uses connotations and figurative language to make his experience come to life. The author uses a mix of postive and negitive connotations like "fast" as a positive connotation, and "lighting" as a negitive connotation. Though the author is using negitive connotation in the paragraph, the story itself is not meant to be negitive, rather exciting and uses figurtative language as a description. This is expressed through the phrases like, "electric fight" but the author hints at what they mean through the following context clues like, " for us to turn on and off as we please." Which indicated a light swich, and the electric that "fighting" through it. This make it feel like not just a light swich or power, but an electric storm that comes to life!
Answer: It should be D
Explanation: Hope it helps
Answer:
Travelers on Highway 66 today can easily experience this past through the many motels, gas stations, cafés, trading posts, and roadbeds that remain along the highway.
It was sold as "the shortest, best, and most scenic route from Chicago through St. Louis to Los Angeles."
Business owners in small and large towns along the highway looked to Route 66 as an opportunity for attracting new customers to their often rural and isolated communities.
Explanation:
The 3 sentences give factual information while the other 2 sentences that you can select talk about how it is popular or how it is an endangered site, not about factual information on Route 66
Answer:
My day sucks so far. Today i have to catch up on homework. I dont get how my friends and cousins get breaks when they are behind and i cant. Im stressing lol