This comes from the novel “<em><u>Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy</u></em>” written by <u>Gary Schmidt </u>and is about how Turner, the son of a reverend, had to move with his family to Phippsburg, where he met Lizzie, a black girl who lived on an island where former slaves live. He was not happy living there at first but with Lizzie he had a good time.
Question: What aspect of Phippsburg contributes to Turner’s internal conflict at this point in the story?
Answer: A. The town is very small, and everybody can observe and comment on what Turner is doing.
This line points that the author and her compatriots have already transformed America: <span>"The remaining struggle for me is to make the American readership, meaning the editorial and publishing industries as well, acknowledge the same fact."
The author already considers herself as an American writer in the American writing mainstream, she is only just finding ways on how she can further expand this and make people more aware of the issues that many immigrants face in America.</span>
Answer:
Sentence A.
Explanation:
When using someone else's thoughts, ideas, sentences etc. in your work, it's necessary to avoid plagiarism, by properly quoting them.
There are basically two essential things to pay attention to:
- when paraphrasing someone one must put internal quotation just after the paraphrased piece of information. Internal quotation consists at least of the author's last name and page number from which the information was taken.
- when quoting someone (using his work word-by-word), the quoted content must be placed between quotation marks, followed by internal quotation.
Of course, regardless of the internal quotation, the proper citation must be provided at the end of the work, in the citation list.
So, with all this in mind, we can see that sentence A failed to obey these rules, which marks it as plagiarism.
Im not really sure on this question... but I hope you do great on that question! Seems like a hard one :(
Because he never makes choices for himself. She's always making them for him.