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Roman55 [17]
3 years ago
9

What is the huskies’ role in the excerpt? They are the protagonists because they are the main characters. They are the protagoni

sts because they prove their superior strength. They are the antagonists because they exhibit uncivilized behavior. They are the antagonists because they challenge Buck and his teammates.
English
2 answers:
goldenfox [79]3 years ago
7 0
The answer is D. Hope it helped :)
gladu [14]3 years ago
5 0
The answer is d)they are the antagonist because they challenge buck and his teammates
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The answer is B. "If you don't mind," asked the student, "could we meet briefly after class today?"

If I was speaking to you without using quotation marks, I would say this to you, and it would be grammatically correct: If you don't mind, could we meet briefly after class today? 

If you decide to quote somebody and place the name tag (asked the student) in between the sentence, you are going to want to remember that both times you use punctuation will be a comma. The first comma will never change unless it is a special circumstance. If I said to you instead: I like dogs. It would look like this:

"I like dogs," ojmichael said. 

You are always going to want to end those with a comma and not a period. Now, the times when you are allowed to use a period will be like this. If you want to quote somebody without identifying who said, such as if two characters are back-and-forth arguing without any need for identification, and you're just trying to set a scene? It's going to look like this:

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You do not end those with a comma unless you are going to specify who said what. If you did specify, it would change to a comma and then look like this:

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Another special case would be if your character performed an action after they spoke, and you did not choose to specify who specifically said it or how they did. I will take "Shut up, Keith" to show you.

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Now, when you split a sentence in half, it would look like this:

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The reason this looks the way it does is because if I spoke to you without quotation marks and said: Keith, she doesn't like you, would I capitalize the "she?" (and if you see here, I placed the question mark within the quotations, even though I was not quoting she with a question mark. This is just how you are supposed to place punctuation). Because you would not capitalize the she normally, you would not capitalize the she while splitting the sentence. That is why it will never be:

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The reason, now, that your actual answer to the question you asked is like this:

"If you don't mind," asked the student, "could we meet briefly after class today?"

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Since the number behind it is a zero the number would stay the same
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