<u>Answer:</u>
Description in Romeo and Juliet has been employed to create a world of believable characters and highlight the theme of love.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet is a play that describes the theme of love so intensely that the play is considered a masterpiece. The love that sprouts between Romeo and Juliet incites many emotions and actions.
Love overwhelms and overpowers and acts in a way so as to make the lovers defy the social world. It also initiates violence. At times, it is described as magic –‘alike bewitched by the charm of looks’
. It resists to be contained in any metaphor, so powerfully it has been portrayed.
Answer:
Putting aside some known major problems of increasing population like unemployment, inflation, high cost of living, power shortage,our country is facing many unnoticed and ignored peripheral outcomes of over population, such as food and water shortage, noise pollution, increased government debt, high consumption. Several factors are responsible for the rapid growth: a drop in mortality rates, a young population, improved standards of living, and attitudes and practices which favor high fertility.
Explanation:
Answer:
A Summary of the Short Story "Miss Brill" by Katherine Mansfield
"'Miss Brill' is the story of an old woman told brilliantly and realistically, balancing thoughts and emotions that sustain her late solitary life amidst all the bustle of modern life. Miss Brill is a regular visitor on Sundays to the Jardins Publiques (the Public Gardens) of a small French suburb where she sits and watches all sorts of people come and go. She listens to the band playing, loves to watch people and guess what keeps them going, and enjoys contemplating the world as a great stage upon which actors perform. She finds herself to be another actor among the so many she sees, or at least herself as 'part of the performance after all.' One Sunday Miss Brill puts on her fur and goes to the Public Gardens as usual. The evening ends with her sudden realization that she is old and lonely, a realization brought to her by a conversation she overhears between a boy and a girl, presumably lovers, who comment on her unwelcome presence in their vicinity.
Miss Brill is sad and depressed as she returns home, not stopping by as usual to buy her Sunday delicacy, a slice of honey-cake. She retires to her dark room, puts the fur back into the box and imagines that she has heard something cry."
Explanation:
Simile, idiom, and irony that is some of the fuguaritive language in number the stars