Did you read Harry Potter when you were on holiday?
Ahem, well the audience will be towards kids. Kids love pets, we know they love pets, who doesn't love pets. You know what they love the most? Puppies. & Do you know who they bug about getting a puppy? Their parent. You target the children, that's who your audience is. Now for the two paragraphs...(maybe)
Dogs, I believe are an essential part of a human's life. They can bring comfort, protection, happiness into one's life. They can be used for jobs. What kind of jobs you're asking yourself, well you've asking the wrong person. Ask me instead, they can be used as a service dog, they can get the sheep together, they can even be provided for therapy. Taking care of a dog is a HUGE responsibility and should be taken very seriously. They need to be fed the right type of food. Depending on what type of breed they are of course. They need to be taken on walks, taken to the vet for a check out, cut their nails. They're basically a child, but better.
Answer:
visually descriptive or figurative language, especially in a literary work.
Explanation:
basically it's using Images and arts (drawings and paintings) to help describe the literary work for the readers in novels or poetry and even plays, almost like comics and manga but only with few images to describe a scene or show the main Idea of a chapter.
Answer:
D. Gabe Newell, founder of Valve (paragraph 2, sentence 5)
Explanation:
Answer D
Correct. According to Margolis, the video perpetuates the “boy wonder myth” by portraying coding as more like a superpower than a learned skill. Because Gabe Newell describes programmers as “wizards” and explicitly compares programming to a “superpower,” his quotation in the second paragraph provides direct evidence for Margolis’ argument about perpetuating the “boy wonder myth.”