The answer is: adverb.
The phrasal verb bring forth consists of a verb an an adverb. It means to produce or generate.
A phrasal verb is the connection of a verb plus an adverb, preposition or both. Its meaning depends on the adverb or preposition that follows the verb. Furthermore, a single phrasal verb usually has more than one meaning.
Answer: I left my mic unmuted acccidently and the teacher strated to mock me as a joke
Explanation:
This is a short modernist fiction that celebrates the life of the imagination, and points to its shortcomings. As a narrator, Woolf was in the habit of thinking aloud and talking to herself, as well as to her imaginary readers. Here she takes the process one stage further by ‘talking’ to her own fictional creations.
She also shows the process of the artistic imagination at work, raising doubts about its own creations, asking questions, and posing alternative interpretations. She even develops lines of narrative then backtracks on them as improbable or cancels them as invalid, mistaken interpretation, or rejects them as inadequate.
In other words, the very erratic process of ratiocination – all the uncertainties, mistakes, hesitations – are reproduced as part of her narrative. She even addresses her own subject, silently, from within the fictional frame, and reflects on fictional creations which ‘die’ because they are rejected as unacceptable:
Answer:
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