Different- mount olympus is in nyc at the top of the empire state building (an actual place in the human world) & above the world (very top floor that does not really exists to humans); underworld is a place that non humans never see/know of & it's under the world
I am going to the store.
I am eating a burger.
I am driving a car.
I am riding my bicycle.
I am writing a poem.
I am watching television.
I am talking on the phone.
I am doing my homework.
I am dancing.
I am swimming.
Answer:
Don't make so much noise. Noriko <em><u>is trying</u></em> to study for her ESL test!
Explanation:
In the given sentence, the speaker is seen asking or rather ordering the others to not make any noise. And the verb in the blank will be in the present continuous tense, as the act of studying is still an ongoing act.
Considering the verbs in the given sentences, "make" is in the present tense which makes the tense in the next sentence a present tense too. And, the helping verb "is" emphasizes the verb, making the next sentence into a continuous form.
Thus, the final sentence will be
<em>"Don't make so much noise. Noriko </em><u><em>is trying</em></u><em> to study for her ESL test."</em>
I read an analysis of the poem "Afterwards" by Thomas Hardy.
Euphemism is defined as the use of an indirect word or expression as a substitute of the actual word or expression that is either too harsh or blunt when referring to something embarrassing or extremely unpleasant.
Afterwards is used as a euphemism for death. Each stanza refers to the narrator dying in a certain season or time. 1st stanza deals with dying during the month of May and spring time. 2nd Stanza deals with dying on an autumn season. 3rd stanza deals with dying on a summer night. 4th stanza deals with dying on a winter night. 5th stanza deals with the funeral of the person.
Death is a very unpleasant topic to talk about and in the poem, it is being discussed in line with nature and its seasons. The poem uses metaphors and personification to make the subject more relatable to the readers and to enable the readers to appreciate the beauty of death without fearing it.
“…I had, of course, in the great tradition of tragic romance, chosen to love a boy who was totally out of my reach.”