<span>Nick Carraway is the first-person narrator, who's always on the outside looking in. He says at the beginning that he's "inclined to reserve all judgements,", so he's almost a non-existent narrator while actually being there to observe everyone's lives around him. </span>
Answer: b. It looked like she could knock it over by sneezing, but it was good enough for her to practice shooting.
Explanation:
Something that is rickety is not very stable and could collapse at anytime.
In calling the item rickety and thinking that it could be blown over by sneezing meaning it could collapse at any time, the author is helping us understand that rickety means unstable much like the chair which is unstable and prone to collapse at a mere sneeze.
The adverb that modified the verb (finished) is quickly.
Adverbs answer the question: HOW IS THE ACTION DONE?
So,
How did John finish his work?
He finished it quickly.
Your purpose for writing the essay might be to persuade the reader to watch that particular TV show.
(As for the questions below, I think you have to answer those yourself based on the TV show you've chosen.)
Answer:
Despite his gender bias typical of his age, we could just as easily read "every [woman] believes that [she] has a greater possibility."
Emerson maintains that there is something, or at least that we believe there is something, that belongs only to us. As he states: "[T]here is always a residuum unknown, unanalyzable . . . every man believes he has a greater possibility."
Explanation:
When we alter author's words, or add words which are not in the original text, we must put a pair of square brackets - [ ] around the change in our quotation. In this case, the brackets are put both in the first and second quotation, where the text is altered. The first and second option, therefore, correctly cite the source text.
The third example does not correctly cite the source text, as there is a misquotation - in the original text, the "last closet" is mentioned, while in a quotation, it is changed into "the last chamber", without putting the square brackets.