Answer:
Reading
Explanation:
1.) Try visualizing what going on in the book.
2.) Think about what's going on in the book and what may happen in the book later on.
3.) Try to make a connection with the book and relate what going on in your life and how it is relating to your life.
Hope this helped!
Answer:
Answer down below!
Explanation:
Book: Gone
One of the important characters in this book is Caine, who is the main antagonist in the story. He goes against the protagonist, Sam. They were separated at birth, which makes them brothers. They didn't know until Sam found their birth certificates. I always wondered if they would be brotherly to each other, or would they be mad at each other all the time.
The author used imagery in this excerpt!
Answer:
learning the difference
Explanation: A verb phrase is a group of words that work together to create the verb. It usually consists of a helping verb and a main verb.
Answer:
Bronte creates sympathy for the girls at Lowood school by employing the literary device of personification and starkly describing the girls' less than favorable living conditions in the school.
Explanation:
- Bronte described Jane's first morning at Lowood school during a winter, the water in the pitchers the girls are meant to use for their morning ablutions are frozen and yet they have to use the water like that.
- During breakfast they were served burnt porridge they could not eat and consequently had to suffer through the morning to lunch time without eating anything, an event that Bronte suggested happened more than once.
- The girls are denied simple and harmless luxuries like keeping their natural curls and wearing clean stockings, a fact that ironically contrasts with the way the proprietor's family present themselves in artificial finery.
- When disease struck the inhabitants of Lowood Bronte described the dismal atmosphere using personification: "while disease had thus became an inhabitant of Lowood, and death its frequent visitor; while there was gloom within its walls; while its rooms and passages steamed with hospital smells." All the makes the reader feel sympathetic towards the girls, as they are living in conditions that are not fit to be lived in.