<span>Logic...........................</span>
You take a story and explain the entire thing with only a couple paragraphs, and you don't want to give away any special details that way a person can know a little about the book and want to read it. Like a "A dog and His Ball" is about a lost dog who doesn't have a family and finds an old ball to play with. You would put this on the back of a book and then people would be drawn to read this book. ( I just made something up so it may not make sense sorry.)
I'm not really sure I understand what you are asking, but I tried to answer the best I could, please let me know if this isn't what you meant.
Answer:
1. the down town area is so crowded that it is difficult to get a taxi
2.my sister is so young that she can't go to the zoo alone
3.the road is so narrow that it is difficult for two cars to pass by each other
4.the tv program was so interesting that the children didn't want to go to bed early
5.the streets are so crowded that traffic jams usually happen
Answer:
Most people are going to go through many hard and difficult situations in their lifetime. These difficult situations are a big part in the making of a person 's character and who they turn out to be. For example, If a dad was presented with the situation of losing their job, and had no income to support his family, the way he reacts to this difficult time can either make or break himself and his family. This dad could either get unhappy that he lost his job and just give up because he feels like a disappointment, or he could jump back up on his feet and hunt for a job to take care and support his family. This example helps describe how someone can react negatively or positively due to what circumstances are given to them. Just a few months ago,...
Answer:
yes I do believe that Whitman's use of free verse in "Song of Myself," helped him to better connect with his readers. Whitman's use of free verse enables him to talk to his readers in a new way that is not constricted by rhyme or meter parameters. Also, his use of language sounds more like spoken language and helps readers to not only understand what he is saying, but also to better connect with the complex and emotional themes that Whitman was discussing in "Song of Myself." More than one hundred fifty years later, the themes he uses in "Song of Myself," as well as his exciting use of language still speaks to a new audience in a new generation, which shows how well thought out and carefully pieced together his poetry was, and I believe that the use of free verse aided significantly in Whitman's ability to make the poem into exactly what he wanted it to be.