This excerpt follows a grave, slow tone. After Madeleine Usher's return from the grave, the narrator flees in full speed, and all the pasage becomes enraged with fierce, quick action, first represented in the storn, and then with the "wild light" that is "shot along the path", which may be taken for lightning, but an unnatural source of this light is suggested as the narrator wonders what might be the origin of this "gleam so unusual". The reader is thus taken from the realm of nature into the realm of the unnatural or supernatural.
Answer:
When reading, <em>the reader should address the commas by pausing just long enough to take a breath</em>. <u>The correct answer is b (please, pay attention because options are not in order, b is the third option given).</u>
Explanation:
When reading, you have to address the different punctuation marks <u>without mentioning them</u>, of course. In order to do this, we take pauses or read in a certain tone. In the case of the<em> comma</em>, we are suggested to take a <u>short pause</u>, just a second will be enough, a moment long enough to take a breath. In cases such as a <em>period</em> or the start of a new paragraph, the pauses are going to be longer. The <em>comma</em> and the <em>semicolon</em> need the shortest pauses.
I need to see the phrases to answer the question.
<span>Only famous entertainers, athletes, and people of this <u>ilk </u>are allowed inside the VIP club area.</span>