Answer:
"cleverly" and "is an expert"
Explanation:
"Subjective expressions" are <em>words, phrases or even sentences that makes a statement biased.</em> It is a person's personal thought about an event, a situation, another person and so on.
In the sentence above, the words "cleverly" and "is an expert" are both subjective expressions. The reader doesn't know what it means to "cleverly allude." The writer's way of cleverly alluding might be different from the reader. So, it goes the same way with the phrase, "is an expert." The writer personally thinks that King is expressing himself to be an expert. It is only a personal opinion and not a fact.
Both of the expressions are just according to the writer's feelings and thoughts.
Answer:
Both are a type of affix.
Both can change a word's meaning.
Explanation:
Prefixes and suffixes are both types of affixes. An affix is something that is placed at the beginning or end of a word to modify its meaning. The suffix /-ology/ can be added to a root word to change the meaning to /the study of/ whatever the word is. The prefix /de/ can be added to a root to indicate that something is going down; /a/ can be added to show it is going up. For example, the words ascend and descend use these prefixes to show where something is going.
A. <span>It creates an image in the mind of the reader.
C. </span><span>It develops the internal conflict.
E. </span><span>It creates a suspenseful mood.</span>
I would say it’s location. The main idea for u can be arguing why the location is better.
here are reasons why i think location is better!:
if u have a family- school, parks, stores
yourself-stores, grocery, gas near by
safe neighborhood!
future sale cost in the further to make $$$
distance from work or school
:)
Hello!
I think you could have highlight the words, but, as I already worked on this, I will try to help u.
So we have these four words: 1. unimpeded 2. compellingly 3. enunclating & 4. coma- like.
And their respective meaning:
unimpeded: not obstructed or hindered
compellingly: with a lot of force
enunclating: pronouncing words or sentences very clearly
coma- like: nearly unconscious
Hope this helps!