Answer:
because the stress is on the second syllable of the base word ending in consonant + vowel + consonant
Explanation:
If a multiple-syllable word ends in a single consonant preceded by a single vowel and the accent is on the last syllable of the root word, double the final consonant before a suffix beginning with a vowel.
e.g. refer – referred, occur – occurrence, commit – committal, rebel – rebellion.
Answer:
Liesel is referred to as a thief in the novel's first few chapters. In "The Book Thief," she is referred to as Liesel the Thief by everyone. Despite her inability to read, she claims that she stole the first book in order to keep a memento of her brother's funeral with her. You have committed theft, in my opinion, when you wrongfully take something that is not yours.
Explanation:
TEXTUAL EVIDENCE CITED meaning:
Cite several pieces of textual evidence to support analysis of what the text explicitly says as well as inferences drawn from the text.
(which is in the above answer)
Answer:
Answer:This organism may be identified by its color, the spines on its back, the antennae, and therefore the long, thin body. There are many other characteristics that might even be wont to identify this organism.
Explanation:
According to the statement, the best answer for this
question would be:
So next morning he
got some big sheets of wrapping paper and some black paint, and drawed off some
handbills, and stuck them up all over the village.
This text contains humor
from the excerpt.
Answer:
Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia
Explanation:
In the play, we are presented with many variations and interpretations of mental sickness that Lady Macbeth develops, being the central one madness. However, madness would be too general and abstract to answer this question. Diving deeper in her symptoms, it becomes more and more logic (however not explicit) that she suffered from bipolar disorder, by showing the symptoms of inflated or self-esteem grandiosity. Another possibility is that she had at the same time schizophrenia developing psychosis and hearing voices.