When using an appositive or interrupting information, it is most often separated by commas. Therefore, sentence one is not correct. To correctly use dashes, one should use them to add emphasis for an interruption or a change of thought. That means the second sentence (after cramming...) is correct. In the 4th and 5th sentences, the commas are misplaced. The third sentence used the commas correctly to separate the combining sentences with the coordinating conjunction (but) as well as the appositive, which starts with 'who'. Added note: appositives start with: who, which, and that.
A claim is the main argument. A counterclaim is the opposing argument, a rebuttal. An example would be:
Claim: Students should be allowed to chew gum in class, in order to boost their concentration.
Counterclaim: Gum can be a distraction, if chewed loudly.
Answer:
the theme is to not disturb nature and defenseless little animals. the plough man did not mean to disturb the small mouse. additionally, a theme portrayed is that even the most careful plans can go wrong. neither mice or men can predict the future and cannot predict when things will go wrong.
Explanation:
hopefully that helps you
I think it’s B I’m not sure tho