Answer:
due to the fact that the paintings portray a view of heroism and victory in terms of the atmosphere and feeling that it gives off one would assume that the outcome of this battles were a positive one, given the light ine which they are painted and portrayed with in.
Answer:
C. Past; third person-omniscient.
Explanation:
The short story "Born Worker" by Gary Sato tells the story of a young boy's life of a working family. The story particularly tells the story of how Jose was taken advantage of by his cousin Arnie who did nothing while Jose did all the work.
The story is written or told in the past tense, with the use of the words such as "was", "told", "did", all signifying actions of the past. and the narration was done in the third-person omniscient point of view. In this point of view, the narrator is someone who has access to the feelings and emotions of all the characters of the story. It does not focus only on the mind of one person, but rather all of the other characters and is not part of the story. He is not a character in the story, but rather just a narrator.
Thus, the correct answer is option C.
Answer:
why would you though? and yeah its b.
Answer:
<em>The best preparation for a game is </em><em>to practice until you know all the plays</em><em>.
</em>
<em>The crowd was excited</em><em> to see a great play.
</em>
<em>To cheer good plays made by both teams</em><em> is good sportsmanship.</em>
Explanation:
An infinitive phrase is a set of words, with an infinitive as its main part and with some modifiers and complements as an addition. All these words act as one phrase and have one function in a sentence (infinitive phrase can act as a noun or an adjective or an adverb).
Since nothing is underlined in these answers, let's find infinitive phrases for each of them:
-The best preparation for a game is to practice until you know all the plays - infinitive here is "to practice" but if we want to be more precise on the amount of practice and to modify this infinitive, then our phrase would be "to practice until you know all the plays".
- The crowd was excited to see a great play - the infinitive is "to see" but we don't know what, so the entire phrase is "to see a great play"
- To cheer good plays made by both teams is good sportsmanship - the infinitive is "to cheer" and the sentence "To cheer is good sportsmanship" could be valid. But, if we want to be more precise, we would say "to cheer good plays". Of course, we can go into even more details and say the entire phrase "to cheer food plays made by both teams"