Answer:
alliteration, simile, and imagery
Explanation:
alliteration: slowly sinking
simile: crumbling LIKE pastries
imagery: visual
Since I can't look at the paragraph I am not positive of one answer. But it does seem like the answer would be true because if the paragraph has a transition and details then it is a well developed paragraph.
Answer: Wary - feeling or demonstrating alert about potential perils or issues.
Explanation: Basically, a feeling of danger or sort of suspicion...
The word that best describes the tone of the excerpt from "The Fall of the HOuse of Usher" by Edgar Allan Poe is "discovery". The narrator is describing the view at the same time he is talking about his feelings when seeing it. He does not know what these feelings are, what this "sinking, sickening of the heart" means. So, he asks himself "what was it (...) what was it that so unnerved me in the contemplation of the House of Usher?". He concludes that it is mistery, that it is possible that a different arrangement of the objects in the scene and of the details in the picture can modifiy their sorrowful impression.
Answer:
1. True.
2. False.
Explanation:
In Science, energy can be defined as the ability of an object or body to do work. The various forms of energy are solar energy, electrical energy, chemical energy, thermal energy, wind energy, nuclear energy etc.
The Law of Conservation of Energy states that energy cannot be destroyed but can only be transformed or converted from one form to another.
An electromagnet can be defined as a soft metal core such as iron that is surrounded by a coil of wire and is magnetized through the passage of an electric current.
The energy conversion or transformation forms in an electromagnet is described below;
1. True: The energy transformation in an electromagnet is from chemical to electrical to electromagnetic waves.
2. False: The energy transformation in an electromagnet is mechanical energy to electrical energy to chemical energy. Actually, it is from chemical energy to electrical energy and lastly electromagnetic energy (mechanical).