Um, theres no picture but facts are usually arranged least to most important
Answer:
B. Replace repetitive words with pronouns.
Explanation:
When revising repetitive writing, you can replace repetitive words with synonyms, combine sentences with repeated words, and/or delete sentences with similar ideas. You can do this because these help the writing to flow smoother and more efficiently.
On the other hand, replacing repetitive words with pronouns is what you should not do. Read the example that follows:
<em>"I love cats. I love cats so much I want to own a cat one day."</em>
You can see how it is repetitive, right? Now if you replaced the repeating words with pronouns...
<em>"I love cats. I love them so much I want to own them one day."</em>
It does not fix the problem, right?
On the other hand, if you combined the sentences and replace the worlds with synonyms:
<em>"I love cats, so much so that I want to own one someday."</em>
It fixes the issue, correct?
Hope this helps!
Panna
The narrative technique that bears the most tension in the readings of "The Pit and the Pendulum" by Edgar Allen Poe (1843) and "After Twenty Years" by O. Henry (1906) is the setting.
- The setting as a narrative technique describes the time and place that an event takes place in a story.
- The setting of Poe's "The Pit and the Pendulum" was in a cell with burning walls, symbolizing death. On the other hand, the setting of O. Henry's "After Twenty Years" was at a New York street, where Bob and Jimmy had originally agreed to meet again after twenty years.
- The same narrative technique of setting was the most effective in both stories.
Thus, Poe's "The Pit and the Pendulum" concentrated on scenes where the unreliable narrator was tried and sentenced to death, just as O. Henry's "After Twenty Years" dwelt on the scene where Bob was cut by the long hand of justice for a crime through his long-time friend, Jimmy.
Read more about using setting as a narrative technique at brainly.com/question/24086718