<span>After Jack learns that Miss Prism accidentally left him in the handbag at Victoria station, he embraces her with joy. She is taken aback, claiming that she is unmarried, and he goes on to mention that, while “that is a serious blow” to know his ‘mother’ had gotten pregnant from a random man, there is no need “to be one law for men and another for women” and she is forgiven (177). Wilde is trying to state that women and men should be on the same respective level when it comes to matters of fault. He forgives her for her “act of folly”, saying that women should be forgiven just as easily as men can be forgiven for their wrongdoings, like how easily Jack and Algernon were forgiven by the girls for lying about their names (177).</span>
Hi. You did not submit the sample that the question refers to, nor did you submit your answer. This makes it impossible for this question to be answered. However, I will try to help you as best I can.
Your question asks you to compare your answer with a model answer. You don't show the context these two answers are related to, so you should look for that context in your paper. It is likely that these answers are related to the previous question.
To make the comparison you should note which elements these questions have similar or equal and how they complement each other. The more similar, the more complementary the two answers are. If the two answers do not complement each other, nor do they have any similar elements, it means that they are completely different.
Well to understand this better, let us determine what is
most closely referred here about the clause “waiting for the wave”.
From reading the sentence we can see that since Jim was
waiting for the wave he didn’t notice something was happening to him. So there
is a connection between the clause and the verb. So this an adverb clause.
Answer:
<span>adverb clause</span>
Rosie used to be the best looking girl in her hometown, so she was known as the Georgia Rose. The poet Lucille Clifton describes the contrast between Rosie's looks in her youth and her appearance in her old age, probably after many painful experiences that have made her lose her mental faculties, so that she now is a homeless woman. In spite of this change in her cirumstances and in her physical aspect, the poet acknowledges Rosie's worthiness as a human being.