The correct answer is D) The lines from "Harlem" and the lines from "The Weary Blues" both provide details using the sense of sight.
The other options of the question were A) The lines from "Harlem" provide sensory details, and the lines from "The Weary Blues" do not. B) The lines from "Harlem" and the lines from "The Weary Blues" both provide details through personification. C) The lines from "Harlem" provide details using the sense of sight, and the lines from "The Weary Blues" provide details using the sense of touch.
The statement that best describes the relationship between these lines is
the lines from "Harlem" and the lines from "The Weary Blues" both provide details using the sense of sight.
When an author uses sensory elements, it wants the reader to "feel, sense, see, or taste" what the author is writing. This is a good way to describe some action, place, moment or situation so the reader can "transport" to that moment of the story. That is the case of the lines of "Harlem" and "The Weary Blues."
Drive at a normal speed. The car will pull into the other lane when clear, when it’s not behind you you can slow slightly. It will pull in front and you can reestablish following distance
Can you tell me or get a closer photo of the questions please? I would help you but I cant see the questions
Answer:
In Morse code, letters of the alphabet and other characters like numbers can be represented as sequences of binary numbers, although each bit in the sequence is sometimes called a “dit” or a “dah”. In writing, a “dit” is represented by a dot (.), and a “dah” is represented by a dash (-)
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