C. Her conflict was her love and her anger.
A. the act of operation without direct control by a person
The sand is the most gentle hue of gold, almost earthen and muted, the humble star of the scene. I love this beach. I love the driftwood that comes upon the buoyant waves as tiny rescue boats. The crowds of people arriving just to get a view of this spectacular sight. I love it all. Then there is the seaweed, that flora of those salty waves, as deeply green as any high summer foliage. My favourite though, of everything that is here upon the softly rolling dunes, is the tall, tall grass that whispers so sweetly into the gusting breeze.
Churchill uses rhetoric to advance his purpose by doing what's outlined in letter D: Churchill uses a metaphor that compares the newly formed United Nations to a temple, thereby strengthening his argument that the UN's mission to secure peace and maintain freedom is a moral and ethical one that must be supported.
Churchill uses a metaphor, since he doesn't make direct comparisons. He says: "We must make sure...that <em>it is a true temple of peace</em> in which the shields of many nations can some day be hung up..." He doesn't say: "that it is <em>like</em> a true temple of peace" Had he put it that way it would have been a <em>direct</em> comparison, and not a metaphor.
Churchill strengthens his argument that the UN's mission to secure peace and maintain freedom is a moral and ethical one that must be supported by using the metaphor above, and he makes it even stronger by using and contrasting different, opposing metaphors in addition to the one commented on in the paragraph above: "that it is a force for action, and not merely a frothing of words, that it is a true temple of peace in which the shields of many nations can some day be hung up, and not merely a cockpit in the Tower of Babel."
Answer:
Explanation:
Photographic technique of taking a sequence of frames at set intervals to record changes that take place slowly over time.