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Schach [20]
3 years ago
9

Who is telling the story in buddha boy book

English
2 answers:
Vlad [161]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Kathe Koja

Explanation:

Inessa05 [86]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Justin

Explanation:

Justin is telling the story in first person.

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In discussing Gary’s story about an animal rescue operation, Sally said:
Lady_Fox [76]

Answer:

"Instead of focusing on how well the story works, Sally voices her personal opinion about the story’s subject matter." (2nd choice)

Explanation:

In order to answer this question, you need to understand the passage/quote completely. Once you do that, you look at all of the answer choices and find which one is the most relevant. It isn't the first choice because Sally never shows that she wants the writer to explain anything. It isn't the third choice because she doesn't focus on the positive points or the negative points of the story; she only focuses on her opinion. It isn't the last choice because Sally never says anything about any grammatical errors. This leaves the second choice.

<em>Hope this helps! :-)</em>

4 0
3 years ago
ASAP please Write a 250-word essay in which you explain the impact of form on meaning in "Cloud."
Rufina [12.5K]

<span>"Nature is a mutable cloud which is always and never the same." -Ralph Waldo Emerson</span>

The poem “The Cloud” by Percy Bysshe Shelley is a lyric, written in anapestic meter, alternating in line lengths between tetrameter and trimeter. In “The Cloud,” Shelly invokes the idea of a cloud as an entity narrating her existence in various aspects. Told in 6 stanzas, Shelley has this cloud tell a unique perspective on what she is in each one.

In the first stanza, we come to understand the cloud in terms of her functions in the cycle of nature, in regards to the cycle of water and the cycle of plant life. The cloud brings water to nourish the plants and vegetation in the form of rain, which is created from the evaporated water of bodies of water. The cloud acts as shelter for the same vegetation from the sweltering heat of the Sun during its hottest hours. The moisture provided by the cloud also serves to awaken budding flowers so they may open to absorb the Sun’s rays. Finally, the cloud also serves reignite the life of plants after they have died, as hail threshes the plants (Lynch 832, note 1), and washes the grain back into the soil, starting the plant cycle over.

The second stanza describes the cloud as serene, and indifferent to what goes on beneath her, while simultaneously describing her as a vessel for disruption and unrest. As the cloud blasts trees with snow and wind, disturbing the mountaintops and rooted trees, she sleeps peacefully and unbothered. The cloud is harboring her counterpart, lightning, who, unlike the cloud, is erratic and restless. Lightning guides the cloud across the sky to find lightning’s opposite charge, where her discharges as bolts of lightning and claps of thunder, all the while the cloud sits placid and unaffected by lightning’s energy.

The third stanza portrays how the cloud accompanies the Sun from dawn to dusk. As the Sun rises, he joins the cloud to orbit across the skies, now that night is gone and the stars have disappeared. The Sun is compared to an eagle that rests on a mountain peak during an earthquake, joining the mountain for a short time in its movement. The Sun sets and leaves the sky with the pink-hue of sunset, and the cloud is left to wait until his return.

The fourth stanza depictures the movement of the Moon over the cloud. The Moon is described as being alit by the Sun’s rays, and she is seen gliding across the thin cloud scattered by the “midnight breezes” (Shelley 48). Gaps in the cloud line are attributed to minor disturbances by the moon. These gaps reveal the stars that are quickly hidden away by the shifting cloud. The Moon is then reflected in bodies of water as the cloud opens up to reveal her.

The fifth stanza describes the restrictions the cloud imposes on both the Sun and Moon, guarding the lands and seas. The cloud is pictured as a belt around both the Sun and Moon, limiting their ability to affect the earth. The Moon is veiled by the cloud, who is spread across the sky by winds, and objects below become less visible and the stars disappear from view. The cloud covers the sea and protects it from the Sun’s heat, supported at such a height by the mountains. The cloud is pushed through a rainbow, propelled by the forces of the wind. The rainbow is described as originating from the light of the Sun passing through, created by light’s reflection.

The sixth and final stanza narrates the origin of the cloud, and her continuously changing form through her unending cycle of death and rebirth. The cloud originates from bodies of water and the moisture found in within the earth and its inhabitants. She is composed through the Sun’s intervention, who’s heat evaporates the water and moisture. Although the cloud is emptied from the sky as rain, and the sky is bright from the Sun’s rays, the cloud is continuously recreated and undone in a never ending cycle.


6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Please help
Brums [2.3K]
They all have connotations opposite of gentle but it depends if talking about a person’s weight it would most likely be large but in general I think it would be big
7 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Writing an essay on my skill sets
tatiyna

Answer:

do you need help answering the prompt?

Explanation:

i need more info about this

8 0
3 years ago
What element from Ovid's "The story of Daedalus and Icarus" did Pieter Bruegel keep in his painting Landscape with the fall of I
MrMuchimi

Answer:

C. The theme that trying too hard or aiming to high can cause one to fail.

Explanation:

Ovid's story of Daedalus and Icarus tells the mythical tale of an imprisoned Daedalus making wings with wax and using it to escape from the island that he and his son were kept in. Meanwhile, Pieter Bruegel's oil painting "Landscape with the Fall of Icarus" presents an image of the fall of Icarus with only his legs visible above the water while he fell from the sky, plunging head first.

In the painting, though the character of Daedalus isn't visible, the theme of trying too hard which led to the disastrous drowning is perfectly shown through the fall of Icarus. This <u>theme of aiming too high or getting greedy from the myth seems to be the common element that Bruegel retain in his painting.</u>

5 0
3 years ago
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