A has a Prepositional Phrase.
Hope this helps :D
Tim Burton's cinematic style is more gloomy, mystic and dark. It has a lot of suspense and his movies are sometimes a little bit scary. Tim has a gothic style and his stories' plots are not so conventional. He is very original and the stories are quite innovative. You can never guess what a story would be about and how is it going to end. He knows how to give it a twist into his own style.
Whereas, Walt Disney's style is quite classic. It has a lot of fairytales and extraordinary stuff. His stories are more traditional, cartoon-like and childish. They usually follow a conventional order of the events and the stories are almost never scary or gloomy. Disney's stories are marvelous but sometimes you can guess the ending because there is always a happy ending.
Answer: The empty materialism that is damaging American society
Explanation:
F.Scott Fitzgerald's <em>Great Gatsby</em> is a novel from 1925. Set in 1922, in the fictional neighborhoods of 'West Egg' and 'East Egg' ( in real life, Great Neck and Port Washington), the novel portrays the decade known as The Roaring Twenties.
During this period of economic growth, people spent their money on expensive clothes and automobiles. This is also characteristic of the characters in the novel - they are convinced that material goods will make them happy. <em>Materialism</em> is the attention given to material wealth rather than spiritual or moral values. As seen in the novel, increased spending does not really make the characters happy. Although Daisy lives in a luxurious house, she feels alone and is dissatisfied with her life. Similarly, Gatsby throws fancy-dress parties, but is a sad man that tragically dies.
I would say D, as it would allow the reader to understand the comparison being made
I would call this an ode which is a lyric (musical) poem addressed to a particular subject and sometimes it can be sung. I also think of an ode as showing reverence for someone as this poem obviously does as the speaker talks of worshippiing the object of his/her affections.