Answer: Sentence 6
Explanation: Every year, Thanksgiving was a big deal, a holiday of epic proportions, for the Grabowski family. (2) Grandma invited the whole family to her house in Andersonville each year. (3) Cousin Tom made his homemade bread and stuffing, along with mashed potatoes. (4) His sister Marybeth prepared chicken soup that everyone enjoyed along with trays of vegetables and dips. (5) Some years, more than twenty people showed up, and everyone carried an appetite, so there had to be an abundance of food on the table. (6) The table looked like a fancy buffet at a restaurant, covered with fragrant apple pies, steaming and juicy turkey, and sizzling hot sweet potatoes. (7) People ate and talked and had a lot of fun all through the afternoon, and most of them were asleep on the couches by eight o'clock. 127 words, 9.2 Flesch, 1090 Lexile
This statement is false.
Any time a writer paraphrases something he or she read somewhere, it means that he or she is paraphrasing somebody else's words, which means that person has to be credited for it. If the writer reached an opinion independently, then they wouldn't have to cite the source, but otherwise, they do, if they want to avoid plagiarism.
A dangling modifier is a phrase or clause that is not clearly and logically related to the word or words it modifies (i.e. is placed next to). Two notes about dangling modifiers: Unlike a misplaced modifier, a dangling modifier cannot be corrected by simply moving it to a different place in a sentence.