Answer:
Option A and B
Explanation:
The simple in-text citation includes the surname of the authors, then the year of publication and at the end is the page number of the citation. The in-text citation is always placed at the end of the sentence. This means that the mistake is not including the year of publication and placing the citation at the end of the sentence. So in the nutshell the correct answer here is option A (Not including the year of publication) and option B (Placing the in-text citation in the wrong place).
Answer:
The answer is b.He recognizes the sword she carries.
Explanation:
Answer:
1.Her daughters would seek her out at night when she seemed to have a moment
2.Yoyo stormed out of that room and into her own.
5.“I kept telling you, one of these days my ship would pass me by in the night!”
Explanation:
The present perfect refers to an act that took place in the past, from the perspective of the present. "I have eaten" means that at some point in the past, eating occurred. Now (at the present), it is over.
The simple present tells you about what's going on currently. "I eat" means that the act of eating is ongoing. (Though it can also refer to a habitual act; I may not be eating right at this instant, but it's the sort of thing that I could be doing right now, because the eating isn't complete.)