<span>d. During my week at camp, I scaled the climbing wall, built a fort, and jumped on the trampoline.
Parallelism happens when there is a similar grammatical structure within a sentence or across a group of sentences so that there is a similar sound, meaning, or meter. It is important to use parallelism when listing actions. In sentence D, all of the activities in the list have the same structure. They all begin with a past tense verb (scaled, built, jumped) and end in a noun (wall, fort, trampoline). A is wrong because the first two verbs in the list end in -ing, but sleep does not. I should be: rock-climbing, mountain biking and sleeping. In B the first three verbs are all past tense, but skiing is not. It should be: swam, hiked, biked, skied. C is wrong because the structure is a verb ending with -ing followed by a noun. There is no verb before crafts in the list. It should be: playing soccer, riding mountain bikes, and making crafts. </span>
Rembrandt was known for his printing of his etches. Some tools that are used for etching are needles, burs, copper or steel plates, and a press to put the ink from the etches to a piece of paper. For a few examples, his work the “old bearded man” has amazing detail and everything looks like it belonged right where it is. The “self-portrait” also has great detail and could tell that the woman etched in it was farther back than the man. The lines in both were all made in great detail and were very realistic. He made most of his etches in the 40’s-60’s, which is a long span of time, but is when most of the ones found or collected were dated. He was also known as one of the greatest painters of all time, mastering the brush, light, and emotions in his paintings. Some people criticize that some of his work was not his own, but his pupils and having his signature, which has been found true in some cases, yet the legend of his original works will go on living in our history for eons to come.
I hope this helps
Please mark Brainliest!
Answer: it provides the example of sweating sickness
Explanation:
Serious, worried, cynical, regretful, scared
I'm sorry for the lack of details. I need to go, now.