It is an attempt to synthesize decoration, costume, speech and action into one single mood. It Is a debate about the meaning of life. Starting from the thought that the play is symbolic of rather than a representation of life, the Zorachs have designed the decoration to make suggestions rather than to portray it.
I believe he said this because mabey he was sad with the road he was curantly on or he feels he is missing something (sry about my spelling)
Answer:
I remember taking this quiz.
The answer is <u>"the inner conflicts of a character".</u>
Explanation:
The inner conflicts of a character can contain flashbacks and historical facts, so it doesn't necassarily mean there is going to be action or excitement, because you're just recalling a memory, not reinacting it.
<em>Hope i helped, have a nice day ;3</em>
Hello. Did you forget to show that the underlined words to which the question refers are: cruel favor
In addition, you forgot to show the answer options. The options are:
The underlined figure of speech is ________ (choices: a euphemism, a simile, a metaphor, an oxymoron)
The reader can infer that ________ (choices: the narrator plans to take up baking with Lisette, the narrator feels that Lisette should do her more favors, the narrator will pretend to enjoy Lisette's brownies, the narrator suspects that Lisette is dishonest with her)
Answer:
1. euphemism
2. the narrator will pretend to enjoy Lisette's brownies
Explanation:
Euphenism is the figure of speech that has a lighter and more pleasant term, softening a bad meaning of another term that could be used. In this case, when the narrator says that Lisette took the Brownies as a "cruel favor" he wanted to soften the meaning that eating her brownies would be a bad experience.
Furthermore, by using eupenism, the author reinforces the idea that since Lisette is a very kind person, he will pretend to like the brownies, even if he doesn't like it.