<span>a modifying phrase consisting of a preposition and its object. i think that is what you mean
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The correct answer for this question is this one:Hope this helps answer your question and have a nice day ahead.
These are the following choices:
<span>A.The narrator feels inadequate when she reports seeing a supernatural being and nobody believes her.
B.The narrator feels like she lacks control of her own fate when her superiors refuse to answer her questions.
<u>C.The narrator is dismissed by her superiors when she asks questions about a occurrence that may have been supernatural.</u>
D.The narrator fears that she may be doomed when she witnesses a strange woman walking around the home.</span>
It's not a denotation. If it were, the earth would be cinder long forgotten millions of years ago.
It really isn't to reveal the importance of watching the sky. The word burn is used poetically. If the poem wanted you to watch the skies, it would have said so either directly or indirectly using poetic language. Nowhere are you being asked to watch the skies.
There is nothing in theory about the burn and as a consequence there is nothing critical in the tone.
That only leaves A but it is not a very good answer.
A <<<< answer.
Explanation:
Where Jimmy works: he has a "position in one of the <u> </u><u>best</u><u> </u> departments. "