I've actually mastered memorizing the Gettysburg address in 7th grade and now I'm going to 8th grade and the tone that Abraham Lincoln used as he read his speech was a calm but serious tone. In his speech(mid half of his speech) he said " we are met on a great battlefield of that war. " and "we have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that, that nation might live" you notice that his tone in those two main parts are calm and serious. This also applies to the rest of the speech. Lincoln's speech is one of the greatest speech of all times because his speech was a message to the soldier's both from the Union and Confederates side who fought in Gettysburg. I hope this message answers your question.
<span>Like other Romantics (and unlike the Neoclassicists), Bryon’s poetry considers the reader. </span>
"The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allen Poe is a brilliant story with the theme of "even if you don't tell anyone when you commit a crime, your guilty mind will tear you apart". Near the end of the story, the narrator begins hearing the sound of the dead man's heart beating. This causes the narrator to go crazy enough to confess to the murder to the cops. The narration is very interesting. The story begins with the narrator claiming that he is not crazy. This immediately causes the readers to feel unsettled. Over the course of the story, as the narrator accounts his completely unjustified hatred for the old man with the strange eye, the readers come to realize that the narrator is crazy. <span />
Answer:
B. participles
Explanation:
Participles are words created from verbs, that are used as an adjective. For example, the word winning is a verb. But in this sentence, "The winning competitor wins the trophy." the word winning is used to describe someone and not necessarily just the action they have participated in.