Answer: B) Ants look kind of creepy with their weird eyes.
Explanation: The tone of a text or sentence is the author's or speaker's attitude towards the audience, the subject or even the characters of the text. There are many different kinds of tones, like: positive, negative, objective, sad, angry, etc. In the given excerpt we can see an example of a formal tone, except on the phrase "Ants look kind of creepy with their weird eyes" which has an informal tone that is inconsistent with the rest of the passage.
a. True
b. False
The answer to your question would be that the most important sentence in a paragraph is usually the first one.
The first sentence in a paragraph is generally the topic sentence. The topic sentence summarizes the main idea. What is more, it is usually known as focus sentence as it organizes an entire paragraph. The fact is that the topic sentence, as I've said, acts as a kind of summary which offers the reader an insightful view of the writer's main ideas for the following paragraph.
Come back to tell you all, I shall tell you all"
What literary device is most clearly used in this passage?
A. Hyperbole
B. Allusion
C. Imagery
D. Rhyme
The correct answer and literary devicmost clearly used in the mentioned passage from T.S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" (1915) is B. Allusion.
As a literary device, allusion makes brief or indirect reference to a person, place, event or other significant element but it does not openly describe it. The reader must have the knowledge to catch and understand the allusion.
In this case, the poetic persona uses an allusion to reference the Biblical figure of Lazarus, whom Jesus Christ resurrected and brought back from the dead: "I am Lazarus, come from the dead."
puzzled
B.
joyous
C.
proud
D.
anxious
Answer:
It is Joyous
Explanation:
b. If I hear my little sister sing I'm a Little Teapot one more time, I'll scream! (I;m a Little Teapot is in italics)
c. If I hear my little sister sing I'm a Little Teapot one more time, I'll scream!
d. If I hear my little sister sing "I'm a Little Teapot" one more time, I'll scream!
A RUN-ON SENTENCE (sometimes called a "fused sentence") has at least two parts, either one of which can stand by itself (in other words, two independent clauses), but the two parts have been smooshed together instead of being properly connected. Review, also, the section which describes Things That Can Happen Between Two Independent Clauses.
Here is an example "I love to write papers I would write one every day if I had the time!" The run on sentence would be... "I love to write papers. I would write one every day if I had the time!"
Hope this helps!!