Answer:
C!
Explanation:
It gives where they went to college and what degree they have.
Introduced is a regular verb because all you did was add -ed at the end. Good luck!
Answer:
The music they created was original and easy to jam out to. Rock and roll used many instruments to make the sound even better, without using auto tune, like today's music which does not make the artists as unique. Many of 80s music had more meaning unlike today's music.
Answer:
a character who serves only to help develop other characters
Explanation:
In a play or a drama, a direct characterization is the one character whom the narrator directly introduces to the audiences. The readers were given a clear and direct idea on how the character is like.
In plays or stories, the author generally uses direct characterization and indirect characterization to develop and create his characters.
A character who does not change his nature and character in the whole story is a static character. And a character who shows complex characteristics is called a round character.
First of all, it's really sad that we're teaching poetry with questions like this, because this question really sucks the life and beauty out of reading poetry.
A is your best answer. Obviously knowing the literal meaning of a word is an essential first step to understanding what's happening in a poem. It's hard to analyze a poem if you don't know what the words mean to begin with. Once you know those meanings, you can then move on to thinking about metaphorical or figurative (i.e., non-literal) meanings of the same word.
B is partially right, but it's not the best answer. Certainly knowing the literal meaning of a word CAN help you determine the narrator, but not all poems have narrators, and sometimes the literal meaning won't help you figure out who the narrator is (especially if the narrator is deliberately left unclear).
C and D are wrong, and as a general rule in multiple-choice questions you should be very suspicious of answer-choices that use extreme language (like "useless") or that completely shut down a possibility entirely (which happens in choice C).