Answer:
A setting (or backdrop) is the time and geographic location within a narrative, either nonfiction or fiction. It is a literary element. The setting initiates the main backdrop and mood for a story.
The time has come for me to make my journey into the desert. I am only eighteen. But, all children my age am required to make the journey to be accepted as adult members of the community. The village chief told me that it was very important to take plenty of water and materials to build a tent.
The mission seems long and hard. I taste the fresh water from my canteen and the sun feel too hot to bear. I travel many days and many nights.
After seven days, I return home with relief. As I arrive back at my village, the villagers appear so proud of me.
Hope this helps you:))
The adjective more is not superlative
Answer:
1. He's <em><u>a</u></em> very talented boy. He plays <em><u>the </u></em>guitar, sings and .....
2. Does she speak Italian? - No, she's <em><u>a ?/ the ?</u></em> teacher of .....
3. She's <em><u>an</u></em> architect. She has her own company.
4. He plays basketball. He's really good at it.
5. <em><u>The</u></em> profession you've chosen is very difficult.
Explanation:
In the case of sentence #2, without the end of the sentence that is cut off, I cannot say with 100% confidence that the correct choice is 'an' or 'the.'
Both poems are similar because they are both about nature and are also presented in a sad
tone at first.
“I wandered lonely as a cloud” is a lyrical poem and it depicts Wordsworth’s response to nature’s beauty while the haiku by Basho represents the
imagery of spring day.
Their structural difference is that the haiku only has three
lines with 5, 7, 5 syllables each line while “I wander lonely as a cloud” has a
stanza with six lines in iambic tetrameter.