• State the central idea in your own words.
• Begin with the central idea and then include a few key details.
• Include all the details and examples given in the speech.
Terribly sorry if one of them ends up being wrong. However, I hope I was of help.
Answer:
Which of the following is NOT part of the plot structure? The cast of characters are NOT part of the plot structure. The plot structure consists of an exposition, a rising action, a climax, falling action, and the resolution. Characters are important to the plot, but not a part of the actual structure of it.
What it is saying is it is like having a peanut butter jelly sandwich without the bread. It is ridiculous and something that is needed to make a whole of something. So like per say, you have a teddy bear but you buy that teddy bear but it has no filling in it. So it's like claiming to be a car salesman, without the cars. I hope this helps, sorry if it doesn't make sense.
Answer: best answer for this is False
Explanation: if you always think you are going to fail with something, you can never have the mindset that you will succeed. so it always has negative thinking instead of positive.
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).