What is the book or excerpt?
Sorry if this may be incorrect:
Could it possibly be Aye-Aye?
I know it’s an unusual name for an animal but it is real animal in fact.
Answer:
Ok well
Explanation:
First you got to try to hook the reader in a way that will explain what the essays wants, then when you go to you supporting paragraphs make sure to give lots of information and evidence that will help the reader understand what you have written in the introduction paragraph but here is the catch don't write all of it in one paragraph spread it out in many paragraphs so that the reader understands much better and so advice write like 2 pages cause i think that will give you extra credit.
<span>the answer to your question is gonna be to illustrate Jim's superstitious beliefs.
hope this helps :)</span>
I would have to say A is the correct answer. Usually when you have sources coming from a book or the internet, you have to cite the source after you state it in your text and then also in the work cited. For example:
Monkey's are crazy and act like humans. They are the closest thing relatable to humans, hence why they do the same things we do. It really is a game of "Monkey See, Monkey Do (Monkey 101 p 15-19)"
Work Cited Page:
"Monkey 101," Monkey's Anonymous. 1956, pg. 15-19
When readers see the works cited page, they use the information found to refer back to your text and also to make sure that your citations are real. If I were to search for the citation that I made up, the chances of me actually finding a book called "Monkey 101" with the exact phrase "Monkey See, Monkey Do" is slim to none. Please excuse my crazy example though, and please do not hold my citation right above to the correct format. I just threw the example together. But I hope this helps!