Answer:A tour-de-force by New York Times bestselling graphic novelist Gene Yang, American Born Chinese tells the story of three apparently unrelated characters: Jin Wang, who moves to a new neighborhood with his family only to discover that he's the only Chinese-American student at his new school; the powerful Monkey King, ...
Explanation:
First of all, the setting is enhanced by a stark contrast between two images that are put into the equation. The first image represents a bleak, gloomy picture of anonymous faces deep beneath the ground, in the Metro station, waiting for their train to come. The second image suddenly brings us somewhere else - into nature, with hints to the bleakness of the first scene ("wet", "black"). The setting of this short, modernist haiku poem is a big city with all modernist fascination by its crowded scenes, dynamics, and alienation. It's like the speaker froze the image, the people's actions and movements at this crowded place on a busy day. But it's not the speaker's influence; it's their very act of passively waiting for the train. By introducing the glimpse into nature, Pound made a counterpoint that provides an entirely new and fresh perspective on the city scene. Another modernist element is the use of language - everyday language, unadorned, free of all formal restraints, direct ("these") and simple. It also enhances the setting of the poem because it fits into the city context.
5, because an adverb is commonly ending in ly
A criminal defendant. such as a lawyer