Anything that sounds like a name, city, month, etc. gets capitalized... So for example the first sentence would be...
Early in April, Paula and Harry Jones left on their trip.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
a) of
b) to
c) for
d) before
e) for
f) by
g) in
h) about
i) about
Explanation:
The words given above are<em> </em><em>prepositions</em> - words which indicate the relationship between a noun/pronoun and other words within a sentence. Common prepositions used in the English language are<em> at, by, beside, above, at, before, near, on, to, under, upon, </em>etc. For instance, preposition <em>'by' </em>is often used to identify the agent that performs the action of the verb. In this case, it is stated that the questions are asked "<em>by</em> the doctor's assistant."
The language system is semantics. "Coke" v.s "Sprite." are two different words, so we are focusing on a word. When Anna paused, she was confused because to Melinda, A Coke means a Sprite in her vocabulary. She wanted to confirm the same meaning. Semantics involves a changing meaning depending on the person. She is visiting from Alabama, so the meanings may have chosen just like dialects. Thus, it cannot be phonology/morphology, syntax, or pragmatics.
Humor and satire draw attention to the subject, making readers think about it. The more they think about it, the more they consider it a serious point. Consideration leads to more attention for the author, and therefore the author sells more books. See, everything ties back to commercialism! You know, if you think about it though, it's true. Humor and satire draw our attention because they make us laugh. We humans<span> like to laugh, so of </span>course<span>, we will remember what made us laugh. So remembering it will make us consider it, and considering it makes us see it as a serious point.</span>