I think it is a run-on sentence.
Answer:
1. How does this speech differ from an autobiography or memoir?
A) An autobiography or memoir would have a more dispassionate and factual tone. : A speech consist of different emotions along with opinions and facts. Whereas an autobiography is an accumulation of facts and figures strictly.
2. In which research source could you find the most information about figurative language?
D) book titled, Understanding Literary Language and Forms
: A book completely written for the purpose of understanding language and its forms would be the best source to understand figurative language.
3. Assume the speaker is speaking autobiographically. If you wanted to research the graduates of Meloncamp High School, this passage would be considered a
A) A primary source information: An autobiography is considered to the primary source as it coming straight from the person himself.
4. If Conrad wanted to find out the average pay and job opportunities for writers, which resource should he consult?
B) interview someone who is a writer : A writer would best know the opportunities and the pay scales that are being provided in the market for the writers.
In chapter 2 of the Lightening Thief, Percy sees 3 old ladies knitting a sock and one cuts a string looking in his direction which symbolizes Percy's lifeline is in danger. The ladies know he is a demigod in danger, and the mist keeps him from knowing this. The mist conceals magic. Later as the book goes on strange events lead to a realization that he is a demigod.
Here are the answers for the given clauses above:
1. <span>that uses the technique of stream of consciousness: Adjectival clause
2. </span><span>how Faulkner envisioned the world through the eyes of Benjy Compson: Adverbial clause
3. </span><span>That his sympathies were with the cook Dilsey: Noun clause
4. </span><span>Because the first section of the book is seen through the eyes of a mentally handicapped man: Adverbial clause
5. </span><span>that is worth the work : adjectival clause
6. </span><span>If you read Faulkner’s opus: adverbial clause</span>