Answer:
Acro-bat
Acro-nym
Acro-phobia
Explanation:
The greek word acro is used to refer to top, height, or beggining, in this case for example, Acro-bat, makes references to someone who performs gymnastic feats on the top of the circus, Acro-nym are used to develop an idea throu the first letters of the words that form it, like NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement), ad acro-phobia is the fear of heights which is formed by acro-heights, and phobia, fear.
B. an unusual use of Middle English.
C. fatally flawed characters.
D. the device of mistaken identity.
c I think is the answer
Answer: The device of mistaken identity.
Explanation: In his comedies, Shakespeare often employs two interesting devices:
* Mistaken identity. Either characters aren’t what they seem to be (appearing in disguise), or they mistake the identity of others (due to a spell, for example, as you’ll see in A Midsummer Night’s Dream).
* Fool or clown. This character may seem silly or mischievous, but he’s often wiser than some of the more respectable characters in the play.
Answer: It reminds readers of the loneliness and absolute desolation of the characters.
In Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus, Mary Shelley presents characters that are lonely. In particular, the creature which Victor created feels alone and misunderstood everywhere it goes. This major theme of lack of human connection is highlighted by the setting that Shelley chooses. The sterile, unwelcoming cold of the North Pole and the Alps serve to highlight the emptiness that the creature feels.
Answer: Warn readers about the abandonment, loneliness, misfortunes and cruelty of the characters. It also makes reference that the past events can affect us in any location.
Explanation: These landscapes show the influence of nature on the desires and actions of the characters. In the middle of the cruel and desolate winter desert, the monster claims its creator for its poor existence, its abandonment and its solitude.
Aren't
2. Underground caverns _______ a big tourist attraction in Virginia.
is
are
3. Isaac Asimov’s Book of Facts _______ full of interesting bits of information.
is
are
4. _______ the café have a special lunch every day?
Doesn't
Don't
5. We _______ on the telephone for very long.
wasn't
weren't
1.Aren’t the pyramids in Mexico?
The correct answer is “aren’t” since the subject of the verb is “the pyramids”, which is a plural noun and the subject-verb agreement corresponds with the third person plural.
2. Underground caverns are a big tourist attraction in Virginia.
The correct option is “are” because the subject is “underground caverns”, a plural noun that agrees with the verb to be in the third person plural.
3. Isaac Asimov’s Book of Facts is full of interesting bits of information.
In this sentence, the correct answer is the verb form “is” since the subject refers to the book that is a singular noun, which corresponds with the third person singular. The subject can be replaced by the personal pronoun “it”.
4.Doesn’t the café have a special lunch every day?
The correct answer is “doesn’t” since this is an auxiliary verb in the negative form that agrees with the subject of the question “the café”. The subject could be replaced by “it”, and that is why the auxiliary verb must correspond with the third person singular.
5. We weren’t on the phone for very long.
In this sentence, the correct option is “weren’t” because this is the past form of the verb to be that corresponds with the first person plural “we”.
The correct way to fill in the blanks of each of the sentence chossing either a singular or a plural verb is as follows:
To know whether we should use a verb in its singular or plural form, we must look first at the subject and determined if it is a singular or a plural noun. Let's do that for each subject:
Learn more about singular and plural here:
Question: Select the correctly punctuated sentence.
Options:
Answer: The correct answer is:
Explanation: The correct answer has all dialogue marked in quotation marks and the beginning of each sentence starts with a capital letter. Also, the comma is used correctly.
The correctly punctuated sentence is "There is nothing to worry about," he assured me. "Forget it."
In this sentence, the dialogue is correctly punctuated with quotation marks.
The comma is placed before the closing quotation mark, separating the dialogue tag ("he assured me") from the spoken words
Also, the period is correctly placed inside the closing quotation mark at the end of the second sentence ("Forget it").
Learn more about punctuation at:
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