The answer is:
“Tony cooked dinner, and I made the salad, but Mike just ate.”
As stated by William Strunk, independent clauses must not be separated by a comma. However, he suggests placing a comma before a conjunction when introducing an independent clause. Therefore, the first two clauses are joined by a comma and the conjunction <em>and,</em> while the last clause is separated by a comma before the conjunction <em>but.</em>
<span>QUESTION 1: B. The narrator’s mental state.
In “The Yellow Wallpaper,” the wallpaper symbolizes the narrator’s mental state. The narrator actually once describes the wallpaper has having a look like a broken neck and, too, mentions it looks like it committing suicide. The descriptions of the paper get odder and odder with regard aesthetics to eventually what can be interpreted as crazy, and this parallels the narrator’s steady decline into insanity. Because of this parallel, again, the wallpaper can certainly be said to symbolize the narrator’s mental state.
QUESTION 2: B. Feeling of being trapped and her desire to escape.
The narrator of “The Yellow Wallpaper” projects her own feeling of being trapped and her desire to escape onto the woman creeping behind the wallpaper. As the story progresses, the narrator becomes less and less content with her status within the house/room with the yellow paper. As the story progresses, she begins to see a woman in the wallpaper behind what appear to her as bars. Thus, because the narrator desires to escape her situation as does the woman behind the bars in the wallpaper, it can be said that the woman she sees is a projection of feeling of being trapped and desire to escape.</span>
Answer it should be Letter D on the morning of January 8 1815 the redcoats made their attack.
Base on my research and further understanding about the said topic, I would say that every structure of a poem may have a figurative speech and also flowery words that allows the reader to feel the emotion of the said poem. I hope you are satisfied with my answer and feel free to ask for more