Answer:
Wild birds are green, with yellow heads, and black barring across the wings. Their beaks are quite small, and the base of the bill is usually blue. They are just six or seven inches long, and weigh no more than an ounce. These birds have long, pointed tails and wings.
Answer:
1. Inside
2. Use dialogue, write as if you were in a conversation, vary your sentences, give it a personal touch, and use humor (if appropriate)
3. Questions and answers are used together. Short sentences are sandwiched between longer ones. No sentence is built exactly like the one before it.
4. It is more interesting to the reader to feel there is a real person behind the writing, and sometimes the reader can relate to your experience.
5. A humorous quotation or anecdote.
Explanation:
D because it shows you what tense the verb is relating to the time.
Answer:
He did not kill Caesar out of a lack of love for him, he says, but because his love for Rome outweighed his love of a single man. Brutus explains to the crowd that Antony had no part in the conspiracy but that he will now be part of the new. The plebeians call the conspirators traitors and demand that Antony read the will.
Explanation: hope you found this helpful
Answer:
Number 4 would be the best answer.
Explanation:
Passing through each option, from a deductible, logical perspective:
- Number 3 cannot be concluded from the excerpt given.
- Number 1 could maybe be a possible answer, but can be dropped aside due to the fact that the speaker implies a certain level of pride to his statement, when he says that he has made the railroad 'race against time'. Hence, he would probably still want to keep building them!
- Number 2 is the one that is maybe best confused. As the conclusion 'Now it's done!' could very much either mean that all railroads have been completed, or that he hasn't found work anymore. This can be clarified by considering that he's talking about <em>a </em><em>railroad, </em>and that his whole speech has a certain emotional, almost poethical appeal to it. So the main point here isn't the general need for railroads, but rather the speaker's feelings and aflictions.