In a first person point of view
<span>It isn’t the literal meanings of the words that make it difficult. It’s the connotations — all those associated ideas that hang around a word like shadows of other meanings. It’s connotation that makes <em>house</em> different from<em> home </em>and makes <em>scheme</em> into something shadier in American English than it is in British English. </span><span>A good translator, accordingly, will try to convey the connotative as well as the literal meanings in the text; but sometimes that can be a whole bundle of meanings at once, and trying to fit all of them into the space available can be like trying to stuff a down sleeping bag back into its sack.</span>
False.
It may have a verb, but phrases do not have subjects.
Hope this helps, baii <3
The correct answers to the given questions are:
- (B) webmail
- (C) web browser
<h3>What is a Web Browser?</h3>
This refers to the internet application or software that enables a person to access the internet.
Hence, we can see that because he needs to stay in constant communication with his business partner and send weekly reports, the use of webmail is needed, and he would need a web browser.
Read more about web browsers here:
brainly.com/question/13118593
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Answer:
b.
Explanation:
The tone of the poem is JOYFULLY RENEWED. Emily Dickinson used captilization on the nouns to help reader create a mental image of what she saw. This is a happy poem.