In my opinion, the correct answer is <span>A.)The poem uses figurative language and rhyme to express the speaker's ideas. Shelley uses metaphors, similes, imagery, sound devices such as sibilance, but those features are not typical only for the 19th-century lyric poetry. However, rhyme was used almost regularly. As for the B and C options, they can be applied to poetry from any age. The D option is not at all typical for the 19th-century poetry. Some poets used it (such as Wordsworth in Britain and Whitman in U.S.), but most of them didn't.</span>
Explanation:
Peter was tired when he arrived home because he caught up at dawn and he was driving for 10 hours
I want to get my car but it wasn't there when I park my car on a Yellow line it was towed away
Mick was a homeless beggar because he wasn't all this work he had a successful business but it went bust
last week John move to the house which he first soft while he was driving on holiday in Scotland jean and Peter arrived home when when they have hawked all the day and
Answer:
This could mean/refer to as to if they don't get in trouble.
Explanation:
As they are on a boat, the captain is "soothing his children" they will "get ashore..." with a tone of little hope as suggested in the second stanza perceived as by someone else such as "the oiler" and "the cook".
Answer:
You won't want to hear this, nor will you believe me..... but NONE of the four options are correct.
Explanation:
* option A -- The end quotation marks are missing after 'itself.'
* option B -- The period after 'best' should be replaced with a colon.
* option C -- The semi-colon is the wrong punctuation.
* option D -- The punctuation is missing after 'best' AND the quotation marks are missing from the quotation.
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "b. When histamine binds to the H1 receptor, the receptor undergoes a conformation change and binds the inactive G protein." The statement about the binding of histamine to the histamine H1 receptor is false is that <span>b. When histamine binds to the H1 receptor, the receptor undergoes a conformation change and binds the inactive G protein.</span>