<span>In Chapter 2, the author comments that the fate of Ikemefuna is a "sad story" that is "still told in Umuofia unto this day."
So Okonkwo tells his sons sad stories</span>
<em>We planned to take a trip to Asia in three years or less.</em>
The modifier "in three years or less" was misplaced.
- A <u>misplaced modifier</u> is a word or phrase which is separated from the subject it modifies, thus making the sentence syntactically incorrect as well as illogical:<em> I found the </em><u><em>stained</em></u><em> man's hankerchief</em>.
- A <u>squinting modifier</u> creates ambiguity in a sentence through its placement, by making it unclear which part it modifies (the one that comes before it or the one that comes after it): <em>Combing your hair </em><u><em>softly</em></u><em> detangles it</em>.
- A <u>dangling modifier</u> gives an information without clearly stating its subject in the sentence. It often consists of "<em>having</em> + past participle" or "<em>being</em> + past participle" constructions, like: <u><em>Being tired after the show</em></u><em>, going straight home was the best plan</em>.
The tone of <em>Act 1 of Hatchet </em>is one of both joy and sadness for young Brian Robeson.
<h3>What is a Supporting Detail?</h3>
This refers to the use of evidence to back up a given claim through the use of factual or statistical information.
Hence, we can see that in Chapter 1, there is the narration of the joy of young Brian Robeson on flying for the first time, until he remembers his parent's divorce, and his ecstasy changes quickly to one of despair.
Read more about supporting details here:
brainly.com/question/540693
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It can identify(if you know who is narrating) to tell you if you are in third person or first person or it can identify who is the narrator if you know what person you are writing in. The second person should never be used in a narrative essay. That would be informal and incorrect. You can also identify when it is taking place in some cases............. I don't know if this helped but I tried
Answer:
6. Introduced
7. Was. ⁷'² Did not/didn't have
8. To come
9. Was calling
10. Listening ¹⁰'² Drives
11. watched