subject
Spanish, 27.10.2019 09:43 Josias13

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

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Spanish

question
Spanish, 22.06.2019 15:10
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
question
Spanish, 22.06.2019 22:00
Choose the correct use of the spanish preposition para in the following sentence. para aprender un idioma bien, hay que practicar fuera del salĂłn de clases. "in order to," followed by an infinitive "to," referring to a destination "by," referring to a deadline intended for a goal or destination
Answers: 1
question
Spanish, 22.06.2019 23:30
Complete the sentence below with the correct form of the verb(s) in parentheses. no me (gustar) leer. me (aburrir) los libros. gustan, aburren gusta, aburre gustan, aburre gusta, aburren
Answers: 2
question
Spanish, 23.06.2019 08:40
With spanish. fill in the blanks with any noun (for numbers 1 and 2) and verb (for numbers 3 and 4) that would agree with me gusta (n). 1. me gusta el pero no me gusta el 2. me gustan los pero no me gustan los 3. me gusta en el comedor. 4. me gusta y en el club.
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
What type of language convention has the author used to separate the declarative sentence from the d...
Questions