What type of language convention has the author used to separate the declarative sentence from the disruptive phrase in this excerpt from "totally like whatever, you know? "
"declarative sentences—so--called
because they used to, like, declare things to be true, okay,
as opposed to other things are, like, totally, you know, not—
have been infected by a totally hip
and tragically cool interrogative tone? "
commas
question mark
capitalization
em dashes
Answers: 2
Spanish, 22.06.2019 15:10, angsoccer02
Question 11 (fill-in-the-blank worth 1 points) change this verb from the present tense to the preterite tense. tú estudias answer for blank 1: question 12 (fill-in-the-blank worth 1 points) change this verb from the present tense to the preterite tense. raúl estudia answer for blank 1: question 13 (fill-in-the-blank worth 1 points) change this verb from the present tense to the preterite tense. nosotros pagamos answer for blank 1: question 14 (fill-in-the-blank worth 1 points) fill the blank with the preterite tense of the verb in parentheses. usted a la tienda por teléfono. (llamar) answer for blank 1: question 15 (fill-in-the-blank worth 1 points) fill the blank with the preterite tense of the verb in parentheses. lolita pablo en la fiesta anoche. (hablar) answer for blank 1:
Answers: 1
Spanish, 23.06.2019 22:20, desdes1499
1. ¿ vives? --yo vivo en buenos aires a. cuál b. qué c. dónde d. cómo 2. ¿ es miguel? --miguel es de honduras. a. adónde b. de dónde c. qué d. cómo
Answers: 2
What type of language convention has the author used to separate the declarative sentence from the d...
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