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lara31 [8.8K]
4 years ago
5

PART B: Which phrase from the paragraph best supports the answer to Part A?

English
1 answer:
docker41 [41]4 years ago
4 0

Answer:

B

Explanation:

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Use complete sentences to respond to each question about your novel or short story.
forsale [732]

A sample response is given below:

Identify the point of view in your novel or short story:

Third person omniscient

Provide a quotation from the text to support your answer:

"He looked across the room and saw Ade lying down and felt a deep disgust. Ade pretended to be asleep, but he was angry with Pete who he was sure was looking at him from across the room"

<h3>What is a Third Person Omniscient?</h3>

This refers to the point of view that is used in narration to show the viewpoint used by the author to know the thoughts and feelings of all the characters in a story.

Hence, we can see that an example of dramatic irony could be:

An audience knows that there is an upcoming tragedy involving the protagonist, but the characters are unaware

Read more about Third person omniscient here:

brainly.com/question/2053675

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7 0
2 years ago
robert levine, ed. the norton anthology of american literature, shorter ninth edition, isbn: 978-0393264524
lozanna [386]

The Norton Anthology of American Literature by Robert S. Levine.

<h3>What is an anthology?</h3>

An anthology is a collection of literary works chosen by the compiler for publication as a book; it could include plays, poetry, short tales, songs, or snippets from various authors' works. Anthologies in genre literature are frequently collections of shorter works by multiple authors, such as short tales and short novels, each with unique casts of characters and settings, and are typically compiled into one volume for publication. A collection of a single author's best writings (short tales, poems, etc.) is another possibility. "Full works" or "Opera Omnia" are terms used to describe complete collections of works.

To know more about the anthology, visit:

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7 0
2 years ago
How many commas do you need to add to the following sentence to show there will be five people on the committee?
Mariana [72]
You will need 4 comas! (:
8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What does beneatha most want mama to do with the insurance money
Kamila [148]

she want her mama to do with it as she pleases

3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Match the lines in the poem with the themes they represent.
Varvara68 [4.7K]

<u>Answer:</u>

There passed, as a shroud  

A fleecy cloud,  

And I turned away to thee, - The night is changeable

I gazed awhile.  

On her cold smile;  

Too cold—too cold for me— - Moonlight can be uninviting

And dearer thy beam shall be;  

For joy to my heart  

Is the proud part

Thou bearest in Heaven at night, - Stars evoke wonder

<u>Explanation:</u>

In this poem, <u>"Evening Star" by Edgar Allen Poe</u>, a fleecy cloud passing by the moon at night changes the view of the speaker. His gaze falters and he turns away from the "cold smile" of the moon to look at the evening star. This could represent how the night is changeable in its views, how things are constantly moving and changing- every slight passing of a cloud, variation in the moonlight, appearance of the stars, their positions, etc. It could also represent how the changing night changed the speaker's gaze.

The speaker doesn't connect to moon well and calls her smile "cold", "too cold," and despite it being brighter than the stars, calls her moonlight "pale" and "lowly." He describes the moon as residing among her "slaves"- the planets, and presents the moon in an image of coldness and arrogance. Hence, moonlight, for him, is uninviting.

The speaker's heart is filled with joy when he looks at the evening star. He says that the beam of the star is "dearer" to him even if it is so far away. His affection towards it is all the more because of the distance, despite which its light reaches him, and the significant part the star has in the night sky or the "Heaven," according to him. He admires and prefers its "distant fire." All this adds to the sense of how the stars evoke wonder by the virtue of their light, distance, position and personal significance to the speaker.

3 0
4 years ago
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