<span>It reminds the reader of the passage of time! It also reminds you that the events are taking place at night, not during the day.</span>
An elliptical clause is a kind of clause with an ellipsis; meaning that there are words that are left out. So here are two sentences using elliptical clauses.
The sentence using than:
-She sees you more often than I. (The missing words here are "I see you")
The sentence using as:
-He likes the movie just as I do. (The missing words here are "I like it).
Hope this examples help.
The author engages the reader by presenting a series of interesting facts that make the reader curious about the significance of the Benin Bronzes.
By presenting interesting facts, the author will keep the audience's analytical process engaged in searching and connecting several pieces of information so the audience will pay attention to the topic that presented by the authors
class's = owned by one class.
classes's = owned by multiple classes. (usually shortened to classes')
You can't shorter class's so class', however. Here's why:
<em>You can only shorten it when it's a plural noun that ends in an s or when it's a proper noun (names, places) that ends in an s.
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</em>So unless there's more than one class, it's class's.<em>
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