By explaining problems and giving solutions! this is the best fit because the other two might make sense at a first glance, but only explaining problems and solutions would be an effective way to teach people how to set up an aquarium by giving them examples of what to do and what not to do whereas the others are just him talking about his aquarium.
Answer:
Because others are easy to write and understand but poem's are not
B. <u>Darl</u> is the answer!
Answer: Sentences 6 and 7.
Throughout the passage, everything rolls smoothly. The punctuation marks are used correctly, and conjunctions are used only when needed. Howevr we reach a bland sentence, "I learned how to focus my camera." Imagine you getting out of school, and your parents asked <em>How was your day?</em> You may respond with <em>It was good</em>. ok...what else, what happened that made it good. Yes, most of us may respond with this because you don't want to dive into the crazy, stressful, test filled day you had, but in stories and in the real world responding with a one noun and verb doesn't help you through anything. If sentence 7, "I also learned how to choose what to photograph." was joined with sentence 6, it would eliminate useless words and avoids any abrubt pauses in your work. The sentence then should say, "I learned how to focus my camera, as well as what to photograph." Now your reader can connect the dots easier and it's not a manual job needed to be done. Hope I helped!
Answer:
Robin hood is a legend, but he is only a literary character. So you shouldn't believe he exists in real life.
Explanation: