I believe the answer would be B. Suspension of disbelief.
A foot is an iamb if it consists of one unstressed syllable followed by astressed<span> syllable, so the word remark is an iamb. Pent means five, so a line of </span>iambic pentameter<span> consists of five iambs – five sets of unstressed syllables followed by </span>stressed<span> syllables.</span>
Answer:
C) One passage provides objective economic data about the river while the others tell the story of two boys adventuring on its waters.
Explanation:
I believe the answer is C because the first passage provides factual information about the Mississippi River while the other simply uses the river as the story's setting.
1. an adverb clause will always contain a subject, verb, and subordinate conjunction (this is what keeps it from being a complete sentence)
<span>2) until his arms ached. (his arms = subject, ached = verb, until = subordinate conjunction)
3) once they saw her car turn the corner. (</span>they = subject, saw = verb, once = subordinate conjunction)
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4) When the storm started (</span>the storm = subject, started = verb, when = subordinate conjunction)
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5) while being taught to bake cupcakes. (</span>she = subject, taught = verb, while = subordinate conjunction)
This is a personal question. I will answer below according to the word that was unfamiliar to me, but feel free to add to the answer in case there were more for you.
Answer and Explanation:
The word that I found unfamiliar and whose meaning I did not know at first was "behest". I had never seen that word before. To understand its meaning, I looked for context clues. <u>The rest of the sentence in which "behest" appears functions as a clue to finding its meaning. It says that, at a person's behest, something happened: "the Exhibition dropped its superfluous rags and stripped itself. . ." As soon as I read this part, it made me think of the word "command." For instance, the sentence "At the general's command, the troops advanced" has a similar connotation to the one with "behest".</u>
To confirm my assumptions, I looked the word up online and found it indeed means "order" or "command".