Answer:
this story does not have a happy ending. Herbert is not coming back, and Mr. and Mrs. White are left childless and grieving.
I think that we can infer that both Mr. and Mrs. White think their son is at their door in zombie form.
It is not clear what they will do about the knocking at the door. It is possible that Mr. White might use his final wish to send his son back to the grave. Mr. White cares for his wife so whatever happens depends on how Mrs. White reacts to the noises outside.
Explanation:
b. The obvious meaning
c. The popular meaning
d. The unpopular meaning
Answer:
Piping hot and spicy
Explanation:
The aroma of the food filled the room is a independent clause on its own. And the first part of the sentence is what's modifying it. Hopefully this definition below can offer a better explanation.
Definition: An absolute phrase is a phrase that modifies a whole independent clause (a full sentence); not just one word.
A. filmed
B. Lincoln
C. There is no error in comma usage.
D. movie
(choices) ugly petite cuisine craze touche blunder
French Words
Petite: late 18th century: French, feminine of petit ‘small’.
Touche:1902, from French touché, past participle of toucher "to hit".
Cuisine: 1786, from French cuisine "style of cooking".
Scandinavian Words
Ugly: "frightful or horrible in appearance," from a Scandinavian source.
Craze: "to shatter, crush, break to pieces, from a Scandinavian source such as Old Norse *krasa"shatter".
Blunder: "to stumble about blindly," from a Scandinavian source akin to Old Norse blundra.