I believe it’s b historical fiction
Answer: A: An author is allowed quite a bit of slack when writing dialogue in a story. So one writer may spell Jason’s scream as “ah,” another as “ahh,” and still another as “a-h-h.” The same may be said about Michelle’s moan and Nancy’s swoon and Henry’s wondering.
Try to be consistent, though. If you use “a-h-h” in one place, stick with that spelling elsewhere in the story.
if in doubt, you can always look it up. You’d be surprised at how many of these words are actually in the dictionary. For instance, The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.) has three of the words you mentioned, with these spellings: “ah,” “oh,” “aw.”
I sometimes use hyphens when I stretch out one of these words: “a-h-h,” “o-o-h,” “a-w-w,” and so on. But another writer may skip the hyphens. It’s a judgment call.
A robbers cave:wet,cold,dark
Answer: the answer is vanquish
Explanation:
There are an infinite number of them.
Pick any number, multiply the 4 and the 5 both by it, and write the new
numbers in place of them. The new fraction is equivalent to 4/5 .
Instead of reducing a fraction to lower terms, what you have just done is
expand the fraction to higher terms.