Cottrell, Claire. "The Ruins of Champions: Photos of Abandoned Olympic Sites." The Atlantic, 14 Aug. 2012, www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2012/08/the-ruins-of-champions-photos-of-abandoned-olympic-sites/261114/.
There must be a period after the author's name, article title, and web address. A comma is used after the name of the magazine and the publication date. The publication date should be written with the day first followed by the month and then the year. This citation should also include the date that the site was accessed. The reason for including the access date is that it will give people a better idea of why they can't find the information you saw three years late.
<span>If the conflict is solely internal, then the correct answer is that the protagonist and antagonist are the same. An antagonist is a character that opposes the protagonist, but here the opposition to the protagonist comes from the protagonist themselves.</span>
Answer:
The examples of irony that saki uses to create satire are:
* Bertha is sad that she will not be tempted.
* Pigs are more important than flowers.
Explanation:
First of all, it is important to state the meaning of irony and satire, irony is to express something meaning to say another thing, or when the events happen contrary to what they are expected to be, while satire is the use of comedy to make fun of the flaws of others, this excerpt uses irony by showing that Bertha was expecting to be tempted to take some beautiful flowers while ironically there were no flowers at all, and the garden does not have flowers for the second irony which is selecting pigs over flowers in a garden, thing that not many people would do.
Answer:
-shingled one- and two-room houses clamped themselves to the rocks like oysters
-in front of almost all of them was a dory or two, some overturned
-the chopping block one man was using to split his cordwood
Explanation:
hope thats right <3 ;)
1.) placed
2.) changed
3.) sliced
4.)plunged
5.)walked
:)