<u>Answer:</u>
Kamen’s opinion seems to be that his inventions are more important to him than other activities. He supports this by sharing an example of skipping college orientation to fix sound equipment. His tone is informal and directed at a general audience.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The writing shapes the above view in the following ways:
1.1 Kamen’s opinion seems to be that his inventions are more important to him than other activities right from the beginning of the excerpt, which starts with him having finished making a machine.
1.2 Later in the excerpt, the readers come to know that he had skipped his college orientation to fix his equipment. The fact that the orientation was only mentioned in relation to his machine (which is the focus of the excerpt throughout), and not as a separate event, builds the opinion further.
2. Kamen refers to his machine as a “complicated piece of equipment” and as “light/sound equipment”, without using any technical jargon. This sets the informal tone which can be understood by a general audience without any pre-requisite knowledge of machines.
<span>Women are not meant to speak openly and honestly about their thoughts and feelings.
</span>
Answer:
A person in my life that displays integrity is my mom. She is always looking out for others and is always putting others before herself. No matter what I can also count on my mom for something, even if it's picking me up for toothpaste. She's a very reliable and trustworthy person.
Explanation:
I believe the answer would be D. Our
The correct answer is Mostly the ending.
A sentence fragment is a group of words that looks like a sentence. But it is not a complete sentence because there is usually a subject or a verb missing. A fragment can nor stand on its own. An independent clause ( containing a subject and and a verb) is needed for a fragment to become a sentence.
In <em>Mostly the ending</em> there is no verb, so this is not a sentence. It can not stand on its own because it has no meaning separately. All of the other examples are sentences because they have both a subject (He, Many people, It) and verbs (wrote, is, like).