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6 October, 20:00

Use a dictionary to determine the meaning of the words sentry and gaggles. What is the effect of the writers choice of words to describe a sentry-like boulder and gaggles of cousin

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  1. 6 October, 20:22
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    Sentry: a soldier stationed to keep guard or to control access to a place.

    Gaggles:

    1. a flock of geese.

    2. a disorderly or noisy group of people.

    Writing is a series of choices. As you work on a paper, you choose your topic, your approach, your sources, and your thesis; when it’s time to write, you have to choose the words you will use to express your ideas and decide how you will arrange those words into sentences and paragraphs. As you revise your draft, you make more choices. You might ask yourself, "Is this really what I mean?" or "Will readers understand this?" or "Does this sound good?" Finding words that capture your meaning and convey that meaning to your readers is challenging. When your instructors write things like "awkward," "vague," or "wordy" on your dra
  2. 6 October, 20:24
    0
    Sentry - a soldier stationed to keep guard or to control access to a place

    Gaggles - a disorderly or noisy group of people

    By using sentry-like the author is probably describing the bolder and giving you an extra bit of info to show you that the bolder is not moving anywhere, or looks as if to be stationed there, ordered not to move.

    By using gaggles the author is probably implying there are alot of cousins all in one place and using a single word to describe how it is almost like chaos with so many people all being loud at once.
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