Answer:
This lesson deals primarily with diction and tone and how to recognize them in your reading. Diction and tone are stylistic devices a writer uses to help a reader or listener “hear” what the writer is trying to say. Tone describes the author’s attitude toward the material, the audience, or both. According to Cliff’s Advanced Placement English Language and Composition Examination Preparation Guide, tone is similar to mood and is easier to determine in spoken language than in written language. Some words used to describe tone are playful, serious, businesslike, sarcastic, humorous, formal, ornate, and somber.
Tone is largely determined by diction or the word choices a writer makes. The process of choosing the right word involves denotation and connotation, which we will also discuss in this lesson.
Sometimes the tone is very clear, for example, when someone is obviously angry or distressed. To indicate these emotions, the writer might include words like “screaming” or “sobbing” and use exclamation points. Sometimes the tone is more subtle, though, and requires you to read closely in order to fully understand what is happening.
PLEASE MARK AS BRAINLIEST
Answer:I think A.
Explanation:
Because she gave up her role
From what I know, the rules of writing dialogue are...
Use a comma to introduce
Use a comma when a dialogue follows quotes
Periods and commas go within closing quotations
Punctuation falls outside or inside closing quotations
Use single quotes when quoting inside dialogue itself
Use capitalization
Use paragraph breaks.
This might not answer your question fully but I hope this helps.