He repeats the number 115 over and over in his mind, realizing he has said it before. Above him is a narrow crack in the rock. That's where the light is coming from.
I are aggravated by they get on ur nerves
Narrative distance refers to the difference between the character's point of views and the reader's point of view. All the characters in a story exist with some amount of distance between themselves. Close and distant narrative styles simply refer to the amount of distance between the readers and the characters. Hope this helps.
Answer:
Explanation:
An argument is a disagreement between two or more people, but it can also be a statement backed by evidence, like your argument that your school doesn't need a dress code.
Answer:
The correct answer is reflexive.
Explanation:
There are actually two pronouns in the sentence (you didn't italicize either one, unfortunately): <em>I </em>and <em>myself. I </em>is a personal pronoun, like <em>you, he/she/it, we, you, </em>and <em>they. </em>
On the other hand, the pronoun <em>myself </em>is <em>reflexive. </em>This means that the object of the sentence is the same as the subject. In the sentence above, the subject <em>I </em>is performing the action <em>respect </em>on the object <em>myself </em>who is the same person as the object.
<em>Relative pronouns </em>connect sentences: <em>who, which, whom</em>, etc. <em>Interrogative pronouns </em>are used in questions: <em>which, who</em>, etc. (but not to connect clauses). <em>Demonstrative pronouns </em>point to something: <em>that, this, those,</em> etc. For <em>indefinite pronouns, </em>we don't know who or what we're talking about: <em>somebody, whoever, whichever, </em>etc. <em>Intensive pronouns </em>looks the same as reflexive, however, they are only used for emphasis and can be omitted from the sentence without it losing its meaning.