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bulgar [2K]
3 years ago
12

Which leisure activities could lead to a career change? How?

English
1 answer:
slamgirl [31]3 years ago
5 0
There are many activities like Drawing and Painting that could lead to carrier change. Of course reading G.K. books or course books in the leisure time would help in some or the other way, but drawing, painting, cricket, football etc. can lead to a carrier change.
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Match the literary terms with their meaning.
mixer [17]

Answer:

1. Simile

In this figure of speech, two things are compared that are not really the same, but are used to make a point about each other. The difference between simile and metaphor is that you can obviously see words "like" in the sentence.

Example: “Life is like a box of chocolates; you never know what you’re going to get”

2. Metaphor

The use of metaphor compares two things that are not alike and finds something about them to make them alike. Some writers try to use this style to create something profound out of comparing two things that appear to have nothing at all in common.

Example: “My heart is a lonely hunter that hunts on a lonely hill”

3. Alliteration

This is a very common figure of speech that involves using words that begin with the same sound. It is often used in advertising slogans to create something catchy that more people will remember.

Example: “She sells sea shells by the seashore.”

4. Irony

This figure of speech tries to use a word in a literal sense that debunks what has just been said. It is often used to poke fun at a situation that everyone else sees as a very serious matter.

Example: “Gentlemen, you can’t fight in here! This is the War Room!”

5. Imagery

This involves using the aid of other figures of speech like simile, metaphor, personification, onomatopoeia etc. to create visual representation of ideas in our minds.

Example: "It was dark and dim in the forest","He whiffed the aroma of brewed coffee"

6. Rhyme Scheme

It is the pattern of rhyme that comes at the end of each verse (line) in poetry. Rhyme scheme is often represented by alphabets.

Example: "I was riding a horse one day

                When he suddenly stopped in the way

                Along came a car

                My horse went far

                Really, really far away"

The above limerick has the rhyme scheme of 'AABBA'

7. Personification

This is a way of giving an inanimate object the qualities of a living thing. This can sometimes be used to invoke an emotional response to something by making it more personable, friendly and relatable.

Example: “The sun smiled down on her”

8. Onomatopoeia

This is the use of a word that actually sounds like what it means. These words are meant to describe something that actually sounds very much like the word itself. This is a trick often used in advertising to help convey what something is really like.

Examples: “hiss”,“ding-dong”,"buzz"

9. Refrain

Refrain is a verse, a line, a set, or a group of some lines that repeats at regular intervals in different stanzas in a poem.

Example: The art of losing isn’t hard to master;

                so many things seem filled with the intent

                to be lost that their loss is no disaster…

                Lose something every day. Accept the fluster

                of lost door keys, the hour badly spent.

                The art of losing isn’t hard to master

10. Repetitive

Repetition involves repetition of words, phrases, syllables, or even sounds in a full piece of poetry.

11. Hyperbole

This figure of speech makes things seem much bigger than they really were by using grandiose depictions of everyday things. Hyperbole is often seen as an exaggeration that adds a bit of humor to a story.

Example: "I've told you a million times!”

----------------------

Hope I helped!

Explanation:

8 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
3. Which of the following phrases from the text illustrates that Miss Maudie has many sides to her personality? A. "Her speech w
mariarad [96]

Answer:

C. “She was... a <u>chameleon lady</u> who worked in her flower beds in an old straw hat and men's coveralls, but <u>after</u> her five o'clock bath she would appear on the porch and reign over the street in <u>magisterial beauty</u>."

Explanation:

Hope this helps.

6 0
1 year ago
Which line from Daly's "Sixteen" best conveys the narrator's feeling of hopefulness?
Crank

Answer:

"But he'd said, ‘I'll call you.' That's what he said—‘I'll call you.'"

Explanation:

<em>Sixteen </em>is a short story written by Maureen Daly, an Irish-born American writer best known for the works she wrote while she was still in her teens. <em>Sixteen </em>is one of these works. She wrote it when she was sixteen years old.

The story tells about a girl who meets a boy at the skating rink and begins to like him. The line <em>But he'd said, ‘I'll call you.' That's what he said—‘I'll call you.' </em>follows their separation. The narrator hopes the boy will call her and convinces herself that he will do so. However, soon we find out that the boy didn't call. This is how the story ends.

4 0
3 years ago
What is a stressed syllable?
masha68 [24]
↪Its a word that you may have to give the most accentuation ↩

↪If you know what the word 'syllable' means then it should give you a hint onto what this word means (stressed syllable), just breakdown the word ↩
4 0
3 years ago
Differentiate between hardware and softwer. And also give examples​
galina1969 [7]
Hardware refers to the physical and visible components of the system such as a monitor, CPU, keyboard and mouse. Software, on the other hand, refers to a set of instructions which enable the hardware to perform a specific set of tasks.
8 0
1 year ago
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