<span>The narrator returns to Horsell Common to discover an even larger crowd, all pushing to be able to see the cylinder. All, that is, except for one poor guy who fell into the crater and is trying to push his way back out. (Which is always the way – the grass is always greener on the other side of the crater.)Then the cylinder opens, and out comes something that no one expects. The narrator admits that he expected something sort of like a man to emerge, but instead what comes out is snake-like tentacles and a body about the size of a bear and skin that glistens like "wet leather" (1.4.12, 1.4.14). (You can only imagine our facial contortions right now.)Everyone runs away from the Martian just because it looks horrible, what with its saliva-dripping, lipless mouth and big, luminous eyes. Oh, and tentacles. Can't forget the tentacles.Since all of the people have for cover (they've found places to hide and watch), the area by the crater is now a human-free zone, with just some horses and carts.<span>Oh, and remember the man who fell in the crater before? He's still down there. Dun dun dun!
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The answer is a because a summary is a shorter version of the reading
Answer:
D. India
Explanation:
Clarissa's former suitor Peter Walsh has returned from India in order to arrange a divorce; her daughter's tutor and possible lover, Miss Kilman, feels radically out of place in an England that only recently was locked in a life-or-death struggle with her native Germany; and the Italian war bride Rezia struggles to ...
Answer:
B) small changes have been made within exact quotations
Explanation:
Brackets are pair of marks [ ] which enclose words or figures in order to separate them from the context. In essay writing, sometimes a quotation does not fit exactly within the author's text because of capitalization, the use of other words or structures, or because part of the quotation is wished to be omitted. Therefore, the use of brackets indicate that the quotation's exact punctuation has been adapted to the punctuation or grammar structure of the essay. For example:
Original quotation: "That's one small step for a man; one giant leap for mankind."
Essay writing: Before landing on the moon, Neil Armstrong says "[t]hat's one small step for a man [...]" and then he sets foot on the ground.
<em>Hello There!!</em>
<em>I think Combined fact and Fiction when writing historical definitely a reliable source to learn what people did and thought in their everyday lives at the time.</em>
<em>P.S</em><em> Tell me if this is wrong....</em>
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