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Effectus [21]
2 years ago
6

NEED HELP!!! RIGHT NOW!!! PLES ANSWER!!!Many arts, including literature, painting, fiction, poetry, and theater, made the Harlem

Renaissance special, but music holds a special place in the history of the period. Featuring a new style of piano playing, the people who went to hear this new jazz sound thought it was a refreshing take on an old sound. Jazz began to attract white music fans to traditionally African American clubs, where African Americans visited exclusively. Whites found much in common with their fellow music fans. If the featured pianist played good, then it was good regardless of whether the player was African American or white.
What kinds of errors does this paragraph contain? Check all of the boxes that apply.

Capitalization errors

Dangling modifiers

Misplaced modifiers

Redundancies

Subject-verb disagreements

Troublesome modifiers

Wordiness
English
2 answers:
Elina [12.6K]2 years ago
7 0
The answers are:
Troublesome modifiers
Wordiness
Dangling modifiers
Misplaced modifiers
<span>Redundancies
</span>
Elanso [62]2 years ago
5 0

Answer:

The answers are troublesome modifiers, wordiness, dangling modifiers, misplaced modifiers and redundancies.

Explanation:

There are several options that are related one to another, like troublesome modifiers and dangling modifiers and misplaced modifiers. First, a modifier is a word or a clause that is separated from the word it describes, making mistakes something common. A dangling modifier is a word or phrase that modifies a word not clearly stated in a sentence  and are usually written at the beginning of the sentence (Whites found much in common...). Misplaced modifiers can make a sentence sound different, even strange or awkward and are corrected by changing the order in a sentence, a difference with dangling modifiers (this new jazz sound thought it...). Wordiness refers to the use (intentionally or not) of unnecessary words, maybe because they are too abstract or complex (Many arts, including literature, painting...). Redundancies refer to the use of words or sentences to repeat information and are also a type of wordiness (like "African American" several times, very close).

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