Symbolic Archetypes
Here are examples:
Light - Hope or renewal
Dark - Despair or ignorance
Water - Birth and life
Haven - Safety
Wilderness - Danger
Fire - Knowledge, rebirth
Ice - Death, ignorance
Black - Evil, mystery
Red - Passion, blood
Green - The earth, growth
White - Purity, peace, innocence
Three - Trinity; mind, body, spirit
Four - Seasons, elements
Square - Stability
Circle - Heaven, perfection, eternity
Spiral - Cosmic motion, growth
Clouds - Mystery
Crescent moon - Change
Lightning - Inspiration
Hourglass - Time passing
Heart - Love
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<em>Hi there!</em>
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<em>Answer:</em>
<em>1. Meg was mending her socks.</em>
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<em>a. </em><em><u>repairing</u></em><em> b. revival c. decline d. withering</em>
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<em>2. I drank plenty of water yesterday.</em>
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<em>a. scarcity b. deficiency c. insufficient d. </em><em><u>abundance</u></em><em></em>
<em>❀Hope this helped you!❀</em>
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Answer:
To inform the audience the behaviors and characteristics of wolves.
Answer:
"Nothing Gold Can Stay," by Robert Frost, is a poem about the illusory nature of life.
This theme, that nothing of value (nothing gold) will last forever, is substantiated through the imagery of the poem.