SENTENCE: Within three days, she was offered a job as a full-time cashier.
a
she was offered a job
b
There is no dependent clause in this sentence.
c
Within three days
d
as a full-time cashier
Answer:
C.Within three days
Explanation:
Only part that is separated and cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.
B. Exposed deliverance?
C. Postponed exposure?
D. Belated introduction?
Answer:
A. Delayed emergence.
Explanation:
Moliere's comedic play "Tartuffe" tells the story of how one man became the bone of contention in a family. Tartuffe came upon Orgon's family and made everything a mess.
Though the character of Tartuffe is talked about and even addressed, the main physical appearance of the character did not occur. He appeared physically only in Act III scene ii. This literary technique of a delayed emergence of the main character is employed by writers to produce some sort of effects in their works. Here too, Tartuffe's delayed appearance heightens the audience's anticipation of him. Also, it is another way of showing the mechanism of Tartuffe's ways of working, just like he did in the Orgon family. His presence is solidified only through the rumors and fears of the people who interact with him.
Answer:
A.
Explanation:
In his essay, Edgar Allan Poe, outlined some rules to be followed to create a good piece of literature. The irony related with this essay is that Poe himself actually never followed these outlines. This essay was first published in 1846, by Poe's friend, George Rex Graham. The rules laid by Poe in his essay were:
To illustrate the use of his rules, he took the example of his poem "The Raven", how he had used the rules in the poem and framed a work that not only appeals its readers but also its critics.
The contrast that Poe had made in his poem "The Raven" is by placing the plumage on the bust of Pallas.
(Excerpt from his "The Philosophy of Composition" to prove my statement:
"I made the bird alight on the bust of Pallas, also for the effect of contrast between the marble and the plumage—it being understood that the bust was absolutely suggested by the bird—the bust of Pallas being chosen, first, as most in keeping with the scholarship of the lover, and, secondly, for the sonorousness of the word, Pallas, itself.")