Answer:
Writers use section headings for a variety of reasons: to help readers figure out what to expect in an upcoming section, to hint at a main idea, or to organize the article's idea. Understanding section headings can help students become strategic content-area readers.
Throughout the story, the moon dies. At the beginning of the story, she is bright and vibrant. However, at the end of the story, the narrator describes her saying, " Her once ivory skin was now crumpled...her arm...was thin and interrupted by bruised veins." Slowly the darkness of the night is taking over. The narrator describes her fading when he says, "she was dimming...Soon, I could only see a shimmer of white." At the end of the story the moon dies and leaves behind a few embers of "silvery, sparkling dust" which give the narrator hope.
Answer:
Yes.
Explanation:
Yes, I believe Abigail Williams is the catalyst for the witch-hunts trials of 1692 that devastated the Salem community of Massachusetts because of Abigail Williams accusation of their neighbors in the act of witchcraft. About one to two hundred people in the Salem area have been imprisoned, twenty-four were executed and fifty-five falsely admitted to the act of witchcraft so we can conclude that Abigail Williams was considered the catalyst in witch hunt trials.
Answer:
The answer is D. The audience is not receptive to the speaker's point of view.
Explanation:
An <em>euphemism </em>is a word or a sentence that you use when you want say something that the other person may find offensive or unpleasant.
For example:
- your parents may say that someone passed away rather that that person died.
- a boss may say that they had to let someone go, rather then saying they had to fire someone.
- a person may be called portly or big-boned rather then overweight or fat.