I- I would love something like that..
The correct answer is "Group II. When the root is a full word except for a final e, the forms usually are spelled with -able"
Explanation:
The passage presented in the question explains the basic rules for adding the suffix "-able" to a root word or basic unit that forms words, for doing this, there are eight different rules that define the correct way to add this suffix mainly based on the features of a word. In the case of the word "desire" this word is a root by itself which means it cannot be reduced to smaller particles and this word ends in "-e", also the correct form of adding the suffix "-able" is in the form "desirable" which means the final "e-" is omitted and the suffix is added. Therefore, this word belongs to the rule "Group II", because as desire words of this group are full words excerpt by the "-e" that need to be omitted to add the prefix.
Answer: In <em>Animal Farm</em>, Napoleon is described as "fierce-looking" boar "with a reputation for getting his own way."
Explanation:
<em>Animal farm</em> from 1945 is a short novel by George Orwell. The plot is centered around a group of animals who take over the farm, dissatisfied with their human farmer.
Napoleon, a Berkshire boar that becomes a farm leader, intimidates other animals with his nine dogs. He is a large animal that both physically and verbally frightens everyone around him. His character is based on Joseph Stalin, while he is also referred to in the novel as Terror of Mankind and Father of All Animals.
Napoleon is not interested in strengthening the farm itself, but in establishing his own authority over other animals. He turns out to be a much more harsh leader than the previous farmer, Mr. Jones.
Answer:
What do you call a shoe make out of a banana?A slipper
True
First-person point of view is when the narrator is a character within the story. A primary indicator that a written work is in first-person point of view is the use of first-person pronouns: I, me, my, myself. Wetherell's story "The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant" starts off "There was a summer in my life when the only creature that seemed lovelier to me than a largemouth bass was Sheila Mant. I was fourteen." Since this is narration and not dialogue, we know that the narrator is a character within the story. Gary Soto's "Oranges" begins "The first time I walked/With a girl, I was twelve". This narration uses the word "I" which shows that it is in first-person point of view.