I don't know if there are any options, but my first guess would be - image. In his early imagist phase, Pound wanted to get rid of abstractions that were nearly the sole focus of the 19th-century romantic poetry. Instead, he aimed for pure visual images as signifiers of the world around us. He preferred simplicity as opposed to complex philosophical concepts. For example, instead of writing about nature as a source of spiritual nourishment (such as the romantic would have done), he wrote a 2-line, free-verse poem about people who are standing in the station of a metro, waiting for their train to arrive, and resembling "petals on a long, wet bough". The whole poem is an image, absolutely devoid of abstractions.
I think the closest correct answer, based on the given options, isThe reader experiences a fuller portrait of the narrator than Dee, who only hears the narrator’s external expressions.
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B. This is because it is unclear about whether or not the bag belongs to the anxious patient or the doctor.
Answer:
The correct answer is option D. Charlie will start losing his ability to write his thoughts.
Explanation:
The foreshadow is a tool that an author uses to pave the way for the plot twists in a story, preparing the reader with information that will later be decisive for the development of the plots.
With the foreshadowing we give more realism to the unlikely moments.
Apart from giving the plot realism, with the clues we provide immersion in the story. We all like to speculate on what will happen.
With the last line, what the author prompts us to deduce is that Charlie will start losing his ability to write his thoughts, since he will stop doing it in a clear and simple way so that people do not laugh.
<span>Kennedy's claim in this excerpt was that since the US was capable of developing the technology to put a man on the moon and return him safely to earth before the end of the 1960s. This would prove that the US was better than the Soviet Union.</span>