Answer:
Trailers and essay introductions can be very, very similar. Essay introductions just give a very brief overview of what the essay will be about, just like how trailers give a little insight as to what the movie will be about. Neither essay introductions nor movie trailers give direct facts and information about either the essay topic or whole plot of the movie. The purpose it to mainly just "hook" the reader/viewer and make them want to either read the essay or watch the movie just based on the introduction or trailer.
Hope this helps.
Determine the writer's view in the story: first, or third person.
clue: The word I is never used.
The ability to manage money was never an issue. The statement of all workers are underpaid applies to his equals. The well to do was not defined in relation to the story. The man in this example thinks he is underpaid and has not shown his obligations, ie: rent, food, taxes. Is everyone in his family in good health. If his brother worked in the same job with no financial obligations he could very well be a: "well to do."
Answer:
2 days or 2 months or 2 years
Explanation:
:)))
Answer: Our old toaster always burns the toast on one side.
Explanation:
In active voice, we place focus on the agent that performs the action. The last sentence - Our old toaster always burns the toast on one side, is thus the only sentence in the active voice. <em>'Burns' </em>is a present simple tense from the verb 'to burn'.
All the other sentences are written in passive voice, as the focus is put on the object/person that receives the action. Passive voice construction consists of <em>verb to be</em> and <em>past participle</em> (as in <em>was negotiated, was colonized, </em>and <em>was quoted</em>).
This is C. Character against character
He does not have issues with destiny or nature, and he is sure of what he's doing so there's no internal conflict either