If the audience is very young, the primary goal is to entertain. For older people, however, there are a variety of different things the writer could be trying to accomplish, such as persuading, entertaining, and even informing. For that, you'd have to look at the content.
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Answer:
Yes No
When it is safe, Will returns to the tavern to tell Mr. Coleman that he has brought the horses for his son Edward to deliver.
Will enjoys a breakfast of ham and eggs while he waits for the soldiers to leave the tavern.
One soldier suspects that Will might be transporting horses, but Will manages to leave safely.
Will leaves York and the horses to visit the tavern and finds it is full of British soldiers.
Explanation:
Answer: I'd choose
'Tommy is an imaginative boy who yearns or adventure.'
Explanation: My reasoning is he goes into more depth about wanting to be on the ship and what adventures he'd have and how he'd seek his fortune and his more 'imaginative' wording instead of talking about his hometown, or knowing more about ships at his age because it does not mention other boys his age, and Tommy spends to much time at the rivers edge watching ships isn't exactly what your supposed to get from the paragraph, I mean yeah you could, but it isn't the best answer/the one they are looking for.
Boo is never seen outside his house until the end of the novel. Although Jem and the reader begin to suspect Boo is responsible for leaving gifts in the hole of the oak tree and sewing together Jem's torn trousers, he is not actually seen until he rescues Jem and Scout from Bob Ewell's attack.
Declarative: stating something
Interrogative: asking a question
Imperative: a command
Exclamatory: exclaiming something! The reader is made to hear it in their heads as something loud possibly or something important or for example, "Oh no!" Exclamatory sentences end witn exclamation points.
This sentence would be an example of a declarative sentence.