Answer: Can I get more details?
Explanation:
Answer: The three correct options are:
1.Ariana got lost on the way to the festival; she ended up twenty miles from where we planned to meet.
3.Ariana got lost on the way to the festival, and she ended up twenty miles from where we planned to meet
4.Ariana got lost on the way to the festival. She ended up twenty miles from where we planned to meet.
Explanation: 1. Use a semicolon between two closely related independent clauses. 3. Use a comma before a coordinating conjunction such as <em>and, but, or, & yet. </em>4. Separate the two clauses into two sentences. Use a period at the end of the first sentence. Start the new sentence with a capital letter.
2. Is incorrect. It is an example of a "comma splice" where a comma is used instead of the other correct options.
Answer:
B. Once more I looked up Women, found 'position of and turned to the pages indicated.
Explanation:
Virginia Woolf wrote her now famous extended essay "A Room of One's Own" as a speech for a women's college in the University of Cambridge. In it, she details and describes how women figures are important for the literary world and even the authorship of novels or written works but women aren't allowed or found to do so. Instead, they are 'supposed' to be confined within the four walls of the house and concentrate on maintaining the household issues. Thus, she began writing for the betterment of the women, their inclusion in the same opportunities in the writing scene. Though they may also have the same talent as that of their male counterparts, they are still denied the rights, encouragements and opportunities to be able to write on their own. So, she claims that <em>"a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction". </em>Thus, the sentence from the essay that best supports the thought process Woolf employs in conducting her research for the essay is
Once more I looked up Women, found 'position of and turned to the pages indicated.
Answer:con cặcàyđịt mẹ ma
Explanation:
Answer: A girl was walking home one day. To the girl, each and every day that she walked home was simply the same. The birds chirped in tune, the wind blew the most prettiest of leaves away, the sidewalk of which she walked on lessened and lessened as she came close to home. It seemed to her that every walk home created the same routine. This time, the birds seemed distant, the wind blew slower than ever, and the sidewalk of which she walked on seemed to grow more and more. This time, things were about to change...