The answer is heroic couplet
Read the passage from "two kinds.” <u>option D </u><u>character </u><u>vs. character</u>
I had assumed that my skills-display fiasco meant I by no means had to play the piano once more. but days later, after school, my mom came out of the kitchen and saw me watching tv.
A man or woman vs. nature warfare occurs when a man or woman faces resistance from a natural force (as opposed to a supernatural force). this will mean the climate, the wasteland, or a natural catastrophe.
Society war is outside warfare that occurs in literature when the protagonist is positioned in competition with society, the government, or a cultural way of life or societal norm of a few types.
Self-conflict—a war that involves a person's internal war towards himself. guy vs. self warfare is one of the most compelling types of literary war because it's the type that creates the most complicated characters. anybody has flaws and self-doubt—that is what makes us human.
Learn more about two kinds here
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Answer:
Sir Gawain - one of King Arthur's knights
The Green Knight - a warrior who makes a challenge to the court
Camelot - King Arthur's castle
Explanation:
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a late 14th-century Middle English chivalric romance. It begins with the Green Knight visiting King Arthur's court and castle (Camelot) and challenging him and his knights to strike him with his own axe on the condition that the challenger finds him in exactly one year to receive a blow in return. Sir Gawain, one of Arthur's knights, accepts this challenge.
The correct word is “gazed”. The verb gaze is used to describe the action of looking / staring at something for a long period of time – be it because that something being watched is impressive or simply because the watcher is distracted and pensive. In the passage, the word gaze does NOT impact the mood.
What really impacts the mood in the passage are the other words – marvels, profound, wonder, mysterious, spectacle and phenomena – since their meaning convey an idea of something unnatural, exciting and incredible happening before the eyes of the narrator.
The passage was taken from the book <em>A Journey to the Centre of the Earth</em> by Julio Verne. The narrator is struggling to describe his sensations when he finds a gigantic cavern and the Central Sea below the surface of the Earth.
I put in catastrophe and i got it wrong.
I think it's Tsunami.