Answer:
The sentence in the passage that is a sentence fragment is sentence 4.
Explanation:
We can define fragment as a group of words that initially looks like a sentence but that lacks something essential in order to make sense. A fragment can lack, for instance, the subject, or even the predicate.
<u>That is the case with sentence 4: "A dedicated environmentalist himself." What about him? There is no verb, no predicate, nothing.</u> This fragment could become a subject if we added a proper predicate after it. Or, maybe, it is supposed to be an absolute phrase - a phrase that modifies the sentence that follows. But, the way it is now, sentence 4 makes no sense.
<u>A possibility would be replacing the period with a comma and connecting sentences 4 and 5. Notice how that makes more sense:</u>
<u>- A dedicated environmentalist himself, Marco wrote a proposal.</u>
Answer: to help us hear and see the locker room in our minds.
Explanation:
Assonance and alliteration appear in this selection; however, assonance is the main sound technique.
Alliteration is used in "trembling Tyrant."
Assonance is the repetition of the same vowel sound in words that are near one another. Assonance is used in the repetition of the same /e/ sound in the words: "next," "bent," "<span>incensed," "sent," "fell," "destroyer." The same /i/ sound is repeated in the words "quickly," "brings," "shrinks."
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