Once, I was supposed to learn about leadership at a camp. It was a bit of a challenge. I was struggling at first. It was hard for me to stay involved. I hated the fact that I had to contribute at all. I thought it would be impossible for me to overcome it. I realised that I had a very negative outlook on the situation and that I needed to be a little more positive. The leaders of the camp decided to promote me to be an honorary leader because I helped people with the same problems as me. The end.
The myth of Achilles in Greek mythology tells the story of a hero that was bathed in the River Stix by his mother, who held him by the heels. While the rest of his body became immortal, his heels did not. Later, he was wounded by an arrow in his heel, his only vulnerable spot, and died from that wound.
As an epithet is a descriptive word or phrase that sometimes appear in place of a person's name, an apithet about Achilles would be related to his story and attributes. So the correct passage is "<em>He ceased; a gush of grief began to rise</em>". It mentions his death--"<em>he ceased</em>"--and the <em>gush of grief</em> that also represents his bleeding wound.
A noun is a person, place or thing if that helps.
Answer:
The sentence that is consistently iambic is:
D. Jamal requests a pen.
Explanation:
<u>We can define iamb or iambic foot as a sequence consisting of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one. Therefore, if we highlight the stressed syllable in each line, we will be able to verify which one is iambic:</u>
A.Betty told me secrets.
B.Give me your sympathy.
C.Understand pirouettes.
<u>D.Ja</u><u>mal</u><u> re</u><u>quests</u><u> a </u><u>pen</u><u>.</u>
<u>The only sentence that presents iambs is the last one. It contains three sequences of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one, which makes it an iambic trimeter. Therefore, letter D is the right answer.</u>
Answer:
While living in the city has its bad points, the good ones can outweigh them.