Read the passage. Summer Vacation Everyone kept telling me that a summer trip to Hawaii would be the highlight of my summer. It
was the worst week of my life. My big sister sobbed the whole way to the airport because she would miss her boyfriend. What an overreaction! The trip was six days long! He’d be there when she got back, but she was convinced she had a ticket to planet loneliness, not Maui. After listening to her cry for six hours, I wanted to send her somewhere else, too. She started to cheer up when she saw the beaches, but that didn’t last long. Our twin little brothers, who often egged each other on to bad decisions, made possibly their worst choice ever: testing how many days they could spend at the beach without wearing any sunscreen. Answer: not even one full day before they were so lobster-red that we had to go to the emergency clinic! After that, the beach was off limits. It was totally ridiculous that I couldn’t go swimming just because they were too silly to wear sunscreen. I wasn’t going to make that mistake. But it didn’t matter. Mom decreed, “No beach for anybody.” So lucky me, I spent my vacation watching Hawaiian TV and eating take-out food, rubbing lotion on my brothers’ blisters and watching my sister sniffle and text her boyfriend. What a vacation! Next time I visit Hawaii, I think I’ll go alone. Which statement describes the language in the passage? The language creates an academic tone. The language shows the author's biases. The language is mostly in the third person. The language evokes joy.
The mood of the beginning of the story The Lottery by Shirley Jackson is _playful_. Later in the story, it becomes tensed. So, according to your question, the answer is "playful"
In both of walt whitman's and Sara teasdale's poem, there is a contrast that both of these poems describe the horrible outcome of the war in which it destroyed the condition of our natural world. The poem conveyed that the world that we live in was really beautiful and the war brought nothing but ugliness to it
Does Yeats's poem "An Irish Airman Foresees His Death" seem to be traditional or modernist to you? Explain your opinion with reference to the poem. (Please don't put Plato's answer, it doesn't help.)
Does Yeats's poem "An Irish Airman Foresees His Death" seem to be traditional or modernist to you? Explain your opinion with reference to the poem. (Please don't put Plato's answer, it doesn't help.)