I definitely can't answer for your personality lol<span />
Answer:
"A Call for Unity
"
Explanation:
<u>“A Call for Unity” was an open letter composed by the white clergymen. It was published in Birmingham, Alabama after the arrest of King and other people who urged for civil rights by actions of civil disobedience. </u>
<u>In the letter, the men stated that they are agreeing with the need for equality, but not in the way in which King tried to gain it. </u>They deemed him as the outsider and urged people to try to legally solve problems, and not by protests and disobedience.
King referred to these men at the beginning of the famous "Letter from Birmingham Jail”. He noted that he sees they have the right ideas, but that there is a good reason for his actions, and proceeds to explain them, as well as the problem.
Let's take an example. An adverb is basically an adjective for a verb: it describes a verb, and often ends in -ly. Here's a sentence, WITHOUT PROPER PUNCTUATION: "Slowly Anna walked." What fits here?
Let's work backwards. If D is correct: "Slowly. Anna walked." This is incorrect, because this would make "slowly" part of a separate sentence, not the beginning of the same sentence. This is the same situation for C. If it were correct: "Slowly! Anna walked." This makes it a separate sentence, so C is incorrect. What about B? "Slowly; Anna walked." This is incorrect because it makes "slowly" too separate from "Anna walked." Semicolons are used for completely separate ideas, NOT adverbs. The only right answer is A: "Slowly, Anna walked." This separates the adverb enough so it doesn't confuse, but you still know we are really saying "Anna walked slowly."
Answer: A: a comma
S is the wrinkly punctuated sentence
Answer:
D. Idioms
Explanation:
The answer is D since we can cross out alliteration and assonance since those are well known ones. Consonance is also a known one, so that leaves us D. Idioms. You can also see from the following pictures, A through C are all there except Idioms.