Liz shouted for everyone to leave the building and "Liz shouted for everyone to leave the building."
(Can you choose two?)
Number one isn't correct, because even if someone was saying Liz shouted for everyone to leave the building, the period should be inside the quotations, not outside, so that one's incorrect either way.
The next one, it should be Liz shouted for, "everyone to leave the building." So the comma is in the wrong place for that one.
Answer:
Modifiers in a sentence should generally be placed as close to the noun, word, or phrase they're intended to modify. Misplaced modifiers can cause confusion (or sometimes a good laugh) when they're placed too far from the noun they're modifying.
I think its option D. the sense of sound to emphasize the intense volume of the storm.<span>
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Japanese internment was a result of the paranoia that arose in America after the attacks on Pearl Harbour. ... It was also feared that Japanese-Americans would sabotage the American war-effort and act as spies for the Japanese government.