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adoni [48]
2 years ago
7

I looked upon the scene before me -- upon the mere house, and the simple landscape features of the domain -- upon the blank wall

s -- upon the vacant eye-like windows -- upon a few rank sedges -- and upon a few white trunks of decayed trees -- with an utter depression of soul. what is the effect of parallelism in this excerpt? it emphasizes the impressive size of the house of usher. it emphasizes the sizeable burden imposed by the summons. it emphasizes the frenzy of activity as the narrator approaches. it emphasizes the frustrating familiarity of the boyhood home.
English
2 answers:
kupik [55]2 years ago
6 0

The effect of the use of parrallelism as in the excerpt is that; it emphasizes the frenzy of activity as the narrator approaches.

<h3>What is the effect of the use of parallelism?</h3>

As can be seen in the use of the literary device; parallelism, it follows that all descriptions alligned with the literary device are that of the frenzy of activities going on. Hence, it follows that parallelism is used to emphasizes the frenzy of activity as the narrator approaches.

Read more on parallelism;

brainly.com/question/1466033

#SPJ1

svet-max [94.6K]2 years ago
6 0

Answer:

the answer is the top one i got it right

Explanation:

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1. In an interesting article about vandalism against works of art.

This is a sentence fragment. It is a missing a subject and a predicate. In this context, we are missing this information: What can be found in this article? For example, we can modify this sentence with:

You are mentioned in an interesting article about vandalism against works of art.

In an interesting article about vandalism against works of art, <em>Jonathan found the inspiration for his next artwork.  </em>

2. The motives of the vandals varying widely.

Though at first glance it might seem like a complete sentence, this sentence is actually a fragment: It is lacking a predicate. Varying here is not a predicate, it is an adjective, describing the motives of the vandals. We are missing information such as: In what context do the motives vary? Some possible way of completing these sentences are:

Investigation into art vandalism has found that most of the vandals are not ashamed of their actions, with <em>the motives of the vandals varying widely.</em>

With the motives of the vandals varying widely,<em> it can be difficult to devise a way to stop the perpetrators of these crimes using only one method.  </em>

3. Those who harm artwork are usually angry.

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4. But not necessarily at the artist or the owner.

This is a sentence fragment. We are missing information about what is happening that involves the artist or the owner. We can find subjects here (the artist or the owner), but we are lacking a coherent thought process and the verb. Also, the fact that there is a conjunction ‘but’, means that this fragment is a dependent clause. Some ways of completing these are:

Those who harm artwork are usually angry, but not necessarily at the artist or the owner.

5. For instance, a man who hammered at Michelangelo's Pietà.

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For instance, a man who hammered at Michelangelo's Pietà <em>was arrested two years ago for a similar crime done to Michelangelo’s David.  </em>

6. And knocked off the Virgin Mary's nose.

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<em>He punched </em>and knocked off the Virgin Mary’s nose <em>because he was enraged by its depiction.</em><em>  </em>

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Although many damaged works can be repaired, <em>it would take quite some time for the work to be made public again.  </em>

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