It honestly depends on how I’ll that individual is. However, I do believe they SHOULD be treated the same as any criminal because they’re the ones doing the crime not their illness.
Narrative essay: memorable dinner
Expository Essay: effects of agoraphobia
persuasive essay: do you believes aliens exist
reflective essay: road trip
You have two options depending on context:
1) If it's a quick exchange and can be figured out in context, put the foreign language in italics.
"As-tu le livre?"
"Yes, I have the book here."
or inline:
"You filthy p'taQ!" B'Elanna snarled.
2) If it's a quick exchange without context, put the translation afterwards and italicize that.
"Pour ma peine, ma punition, je tourne en rond," he sighed. For my pain, for my punishment, I pace in circles. Now Picard understood.
inline:
"Qa'pla!" Successs! the Klingon shouted.
In any case, I would not have more than one or two exchanges in a foreign language. Either use a tag like "she said in French" so the reader realizes the characters aren't speaking English, or note in narration "they discussed the matter in French for some time, but as Malcolm didn't speak the language, he had to wait for a translation."
Answer:
The open window and the landlady both show the creepy experience by the main character. Both add to the experience with imagery and (should I continue?)
Explanation:
Answer:
D:
Explanation:
I can't say 100% because you didn't put the story but the one that seems more reasonable is D