Answers:
A: Jim can't afford going to the cinema twice a week.
B: David wishes to leave the room.
C: Are you waiting to use the phone?
D: I'd really like to go swimming on Saturday.
E: Everyone decided to put off the football match.
F: Emma pretended to leave, but waited outside.
G: Jack agreed to meet me at the beach.
H: My bike seems to have something wrong with it.
I: The director refused to answer Helen's phone call.
J: What exactly do you intend to say to Mrs. Dawson?
Explanation:
In order for a sentence to be correct, it needs to make sense. For example, if we were to look at B, it doesn't really sound right. "David wishes leaving the room." Rather, he WISHES he could leave the room, or WISHED that he could leave the room, depending on the context of the sentence.
Answer: D. Updating the line of reasoning in the final paragraph to acknowledge Gallup's contrasting perspective and respond to it.
Explanation:
The options include:
Removing the quotation by Redouan Bshary because his conclusions are at odds with Gallup's
B. Changing the thesis statement to argue that the study was faulty because it did not follow Gallup's methodology
C. Incorporating Gallup's response into the first paragraph after describing his original study on Chimpanzees
D. Updating the line of reasoning in the final paragraph to acknowledge Gallup's contrasting perspective and respond to it
E. Expanding on the description of the cleaner wrasse's penchant for eating parasites off other fish.
The change that the writer will need to make in order for this new information to work in the context of the overall argument the writer is making is to update the line of reasoning in the final paragraph to acknowledge Gallup's contrasting perspective and respond to it.
When this is done, it should be reliable to the readers which can be done by supporting the statement with facts.
After a thorough research, there exists the same question that has the following line and choices.
<span>"I served them well/with my noble blade, as was only fitting. /Small pleasure they had in such a sword-feast/dark things in the sea that meant to eat me."
</span>A. conflict
B. Kenning
<span>C. Falling action </span>
<span>D. Resolution
</span>
The correct answer is letter B. Kenning. Kenning is a type of circumlocution. Its form is compounded and shows figurative language in substitute of a concrete single-word noun.