Inspire English International Year 8 Student Book Answers Pdf Apr 2026
Panic turned into something else—determination. Leo snatched his book, flipped to Chapter 3, and actually read it. Not skimmed. Read. He noticed a long sentence where the main character was hiding under a bed: "The dust tasted like old secrets and the floorboards groaned a low, mournful song as the figure paced above."
It was exactly what his teacher, Miss Ahmed, would want.
Leo typed, slowly at first:
"The writer uses short, punchy sentences like 'Footsteps. Closer now.' to mimic the character's racing heartbeat. This creates a frantic, panicky rhythm..."
The blue glow faded. The whisper stopped. The PDF blinked once, then became a normal, boring file again. But at the top, where the answer used to be, there was a single green checkmark and a new message: Panic turned into something else—determination
"The writer builds tension by using a long, breathless sentence when the character is hiding. Unlike the short, panicky sentences earlier, this long sentence feels like the character is holding their breath, trying not to make a sound. The words 'groaned' and 'mournful' make the house itself feel like a enemy."
He hit enter.
A new sentence materialised, typed in a font that looked like handwriting: "You tell me. You're the one copying me without thinking."