Answer:
happiness : misery :: safety : peril
giggle : sob :: smile : grimace
contest : prize :: work : compensation
nervous : insecure :: gullibility : credulity
abrupt : sudden :: inevitability : fate
regret : disappointment :: acceptance : resignation
Explanation:
7: Misery is antonym of happiness, similarly peril is antonym safety.
8: Sob is antonym of giggle, and analogically grimace is antonym of smile.
9: Prize is effect/reward of a cause (contest), similarly effect/reward of work is compensation.
10: Insecure is synonym of nervous, similarly credulity is synonym of gullibility.
11: Sudden is synonym of abrupt, similarly fate is synonym of inevitability.
12: Disappointment is effect of regret, similarly resignation is effect of acceptance.
Answer:
I feel for you. Wether it was a friendship or breakup, and no matter the circumstances losing someone you care deeply about always hurt, and the feeling of missing them will always linger. You will wish and wonder what you could've done differently, and you convey your emotions beautifully throughout the poem.
I hope that one day you'll able to talk to them again, and maybe, just maybe start over. Like I also wish I could.
Explanation:
- Eijiro <3
The poem "A Japanese Wood-Carving" has as its theme option A. Art can harness the beauty of the outside world.
<h3>What is theme?</h3>
In literature, theme is the underlying message or idea in a literary work. In other words, it is the message that an author wishes to convey. In the poem we are analyzing here, the theme revolves around art.
The speaker describes a piece of art made of wood. First, she explains what the wood experienced, so to speak, when it was a tree in the forest. Then, she explains that, once carved, that wood conveys a completely different idea.
The carved wood conveys the images and ideas of the artist about the outside world. It shows waves and birds, rather than trees and leaves. That piece of wood, through the hands of the artist, harnessed a beautiful image.
Learn more about theme here:
brainly.com/question/11054259
<span> I </span>will<span> only focus merely on changes of the characters' minds and behaviour which </span>can<span> be noticed while</span>