Its being explained in the sentence
I would say descriptive but what we the options
Answer:
City, laws, justice, kings.
Explanation:
To answer this question, you must first know what a <u>noun</u> is, which is a person, place, or thing. Look through the list, and you will find out that <u>expected</u> is not a person, place, or thing; it is a verb.
Now you're left with Mesopotamia, city, laws, justice, and kings. A quick tip amongst nouns is that <em>capitalized</em> and <em>eponymous</em> (something that is given a name to) nouns are most probably proper nouns, which is not what we're looking for here. Cross out <u>Mesopotamia</u>, and you are finished.
Hope this helps! :)
Answer:
hi
Explanation:
The location of a line break is often dictated by the number of syllables in the line, but just as often it is freely chosen by the poet. Line breaks serve an important function in setting the rhythm of a poem, since they insert a pause between the final word of one line and the first word of the next line. If a poem quotation contains less than three lines, type the text directly into the essay. For more than one line, mark the line breaks by putting a slash between each line, with a space both before and after the slash.
Just remebr all a line break does is seprate a line/sentence into 2 seprate parts.