Answer:
The Purpose of Mortimer's writing style is to help the reader to have a clear understanding of the customs, lifestyle, and practices of Elizabethan life. Mortimer's writing style can help the reader to understand more clearly what the landscapes, the streets, towns, theater look like during the period of Elizabeth 1.
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
<em>Hey there!</em>
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<u>Given</u>
5x + 2 + 3x = 8
<u>Combine like terms</u>
5x + 3x = 8x
8x + 2 = 8
-2 to boths sides
8x = 6
Divide both sides by 8
<em><u>x = .75</u></em>
<em><u></u></em>
<em>Hope this helps :)</em>
The two best answer that reveals nature is severe and unkind are "Sweating in the heat, we had lost the whole day, dreading to be buried alive in the drifting sand." and "Sand in the scanty food, sand in the blackish water--water that was drunk lukewarm from a clammy, loathsome water skin." hope this helps :)
In poetry, letters such as a, b, c, etc. are assigned to represent the rhyme that occurs at the end of a line. When you see the first rhyme pair, you’d label that one ‘a’ since that is the first rhyme. The second rhyme pair would be labeled ‘b,’ and so on…
Let’s take a look at that excerpt from Richard Lovelace's "To Lucasta, Going to the Wars," and please be sure to read it aloud, so you can clearly hear the rhyme.
<em>
Tell me not, Sweet, I am unkind,
</em><em>That from the nunnery
</em><em>Of thy chaste breast, and quiet mind
</em><em>To war and </em><em>arms</em><em> I fly.</em>
Okay, so when reading this aloud, we can clearly hear that the first rhymes that occur in the excerpt are in line one and line three. They both seem to end with words that end in “ind.” This brings both the words “unkind” and “mind” to rhyme. So, since that’s our first rhyme, we’ll label both those lines with the letter ‘a.’
<em>
Tell me not, Sweet, I am unkind,</em> {a}
<em>That from the nunnery</em>
<em>Of thy chaste breast, and quiet mind </em> {a}
<em>To war and </em><em>arms</em><em> I fly.</em>
Now, if you could please once again read the excerpt so, we could try to hear a second rhyme pair.
While the rhyming isn’t quite strong here, there is a slight rhyme in lines two and four. The end -y in the words “nunnery” and “ fly” do have a (slight) rhyme. So, since this is the second rhyme we have located, we’ll label those lines with the letter ‘b.’
<em>
Tell me not, Sweet, I am unkind, </em> {a}
<em>That from the nunnery </em> [b]
<em>Of thy chaste breast, and quiet mind </em> {a}
<em>To war and </em><em>arms</em><em> I fly. </em> [b]
Since there are no more lines in the excerpt to rhyme, this is our final rhyme scheme.
This proves the answer should be c ) abab.
- Marlon Nunez