If you have a choice of questions to answer on an essay test, which questions should you answer first?<span><span>a.The questions that you know a lot about so you can then focus on the more difficult onesc.The ones that are worth the fewest points because you can finish those quickly</span><span>b.The questions which call for a 5 paragraph essay because those are easiest to outlined.<span>Any of these</span></span></span>
The answer is <em>B: The clause "who as born in Virginia" needs to be set off by</em> <em>commas because it is a nonrestrictive element.</em> This clause is nonrestrictive element because it <em>adds further information</em> about Thomas Jefferson, but it is not essencial to the meaning of the sentence, which means that if it is excluded, the readers will still understand the general meaning of the sentence.<em> It uses commas to separate the additional information. Commas are always used when the word modified by the appositive is a proper noun.</em>
Answer: I think the answer is C
Explanation:
Throughout the story it said that she and her mother were afraid of heights and she had to get over her fear to save Jessie
Hello. You forgot to present the comic to which the question refers. The comic is in the attached image:
Answer and Explanation:
The public knows that the falling of the leaves is a natural process of nature, but the character believes that the leaf fell due to this dissatisfaction with the place where he lives, just like him. In this case, the character leaves disappointed because the leaf fell from the tree and this generates humor in the comic, mainly because he reflects on life while observing a dead leaf.
<span>It isn’t the literal meanings of the words that make it difficult. It’s the connotations — all those associated ideas that hang around a word like shadows of other meanings. It’s connotation that makes <em>house</em> different from<em> home </em>and makes <em>scheme</em> into something shadier in American English than it is in British English. </span><span>A good translator, accordingly, will try to convey the connotative as well as the literal meanings in the text; but sometimes that can be a whole bundle of meanings at once, and trying to fit all of them into the space available can be like trying to stuff a down sleeping bag back into its sack.</span>