Answer:
Yes, by the end they are dynamic.
Typically when the narrator uses information that you could probably find somewhere trustworthy, like a textbook and goes on to give specific information that you would need to know for a unit or group of tests. For example, if the passage says "Christopher Columbus didn't actually mean to find the Americas, I guess you could say it was a happy mistake." That would be academic.
I would...be the goddess of pain and suffering. Although that sounds negative, I could actually clear up a lot of junk in the world when you think about it. If I eliminated the pain of those that don't deserve it, or fix a certain life problem for someone, or a whole group of people, I could fix so much in the world. (That's just one idea, lol I can send you other ones or add more detail to this one if you'd want)
Words and phrases that tell you that the people were suspicious of the circus are “Gradually figures emerged, wary, suspicious.” and the way the people are blankly staring and began to murmur
Answer:
Option A seems the likeliest answer.
Explanation:
Imagery has to do with the visually descriptive words which are used to create a mental image of a setting or a person in the minds of the reader.
We can see that from the list of options, option A best creates a mental image of how the brown cascade rippled down.
The other answer choices were simply narrations without the use of imagery.