Umm…. What is that question?
<span>Old Major suggests an animal revolution against farmer Jones. After they will create an animal utopia.
I hope this helps! :)</span>
Hello there. :')
<span>
Franny is writing a research paper on edgar allan poe’s poem “the raven.” she wants to include evidence for a point in her essay that she’s found in a secondary source, but she can’t decide whether to quote directly or paraphrase. which statement best describes when franny should quote a source directly?
</span>when the source information is written in a particularly brilliant or witty way
Answer: Saying they are something, is metaphorical. It cannot be a simile, since the terms like or as are not being used.
Explanation:
D is the correct answer. You can omit as many words as you want, as long as 'the meaning and spirit of the quote is retained', that is, the general sense you wanted to convey with that quote is still there, even after you deleted those several words.