Answer:
No thanks. We already saw it. We saw it last week.
I wrote it already. I wrote it two days ago and gave it to him. OR I already wrote it. I worte it two days ago and gave it to him.
I don't understand the question?
Explanation:
I'm not sure if I did this correctly, and if you colud explain teh third question, that would be great.
Answer:
Both eventually come to an end or die.
Explanation:
"The Coming Of Night" is a poem written by Linda Pastan. The poem is about how the speaker accepts the inevitability of death. The them of the poem is death.
A simile is a rhetoric device thaat is used to compare two unlike things or objects or ideas.
<u>In the poem, Pastan has compared the ambition with the 'pilot light.' It is important to know that the 'pilot light' is an important instrument to run an appliance. So, by comparing life's ambition with 'pilot light', the poet is making a point that just like the pilot light is vital to run appliances, ambitions are important to run a life. Which means that the poet is conveying a message that a life without an ambition is likely to end just as a 'faulty pilot light' will come to an end</u>.
This comparison helps in the contribution to the central idea oof how life slowly ends without an ambition, just like a faulty pilot light.
I just answered a question exactly like this one but I will answer it anyways.
I believe the answer is: C) Hiawatha...was probably based on a real person, a peaceful hero who helped to unite the Iroquois people hundreds of years ago.
This is because a connotation is an idea or feeling that a word invokes in addition to its literal or primary meaning. Seeing from the above information, Hiawatha seems to be about a positive event.
The meter in this poem is the following:
E. Iambic pentameter.
Iambic pentameter is a type of metric line used in traditional English poetry and verse drama. It is the most common meter in English poetry.
This poem in particular uses the following rhyme scheme: abba-abba; cdecde