The revision that would help expand the ideas in the excerpt
above would be adding more specifics about the sailors' beliefs about the
island.
To add, the Most Dangerous Game opens with a conversation
between two men—Whitney and
Rainsford.
<span>The sentence with a misplaced adjective phrase is:
C. The boy caught the football with a blue T-shirt.
The corrected sentence becomes:
The boy with a blue T-shirt caught the football.
</span>The adjective phrase "<span>with a blue T-shirt" must be placed after the noun "boy" which the word it modifies.</span>
Answer;
The event in Act IV that foreshadows Macbeth's eventual down fall is that;
Macduff discovers Macbeth has murdered his family and vows to kill Macbeth himself. <span>This is used to foreshadow an imminent conflict between Macbeth and Macduff.</span>
Explanation;
Foreshadowing is the use of indicative word or phrases and hints that set the stage for a story to unfold and give the reader a hint of something that will happen without revealing the story, or interfering with suspense.
To begin, Brutus’s speech was formal and more directed to the Romans. In his introduction, he starts with “Romans, countrymen, and lovers!” This was used to join everyone together and later help him justify Caesar’s death. Throughout the text, he describes Caesar as an “ambitious” man. Calling Caesar ambitious makes it seem that Caesar only thought about himself. On the other hand, Antony’s speech was more personal and sarcastic. In contrary to Brutus he opens his speech with “Friends, Romans, countrymen…”. This sets up his later statements of being Caesar’s friend. Throughout his speech, he uses paralipsis and repetition to poke at Brutus but at the same time save Caesar’s reputation. Throughout Antony’s speech, he uses devices, tactics, and his sympathy to his advantage. Brutus only had one point, which was that he killed Caesar for Rome, to stand on. All in all, Antony’s speech was better and more persuasive than Brutus's.
Answer:
B.
Explanation:
the definition of defiant is to resist, or be resistant to.