Answer:
Fire,Water,Earth,and Wind
Explanation:
Answer:
However, some children regularly act in ways that make it hard for other kids to accept them. Helping children with off-putting behaviors to recognize and change these (if possible) can make it. ;)
Explanation:
Answer:
assonance, consonance, internal rhyme, rhythm
Explanation:
A free verse in a poem is a type of poem that does not rely on metre patterns, rhymes or any other pattern as they do not rigidly follow any rules.
Therefore, the poetic devices that writers of free verse use to create musical language are assonance, consonance, internal rhyme, rhythm
This question is incomplete because the options were not given; here is the complete question:
Which lines from Ovid’s "Pyramus and Thisbe" contain an example of characterization?
A. Ringed by the tall brick walls Semíramis had built—so we are told.
B. If you searched all the East, you'd find no girl with greater charm than Thisbe.
C. The wall their houses shared had one thin crack, which formed when they were built and then was left
D. When first light had banished night's bright star-fires from the sky and sun had left the brine-soaked meadows dry
The answer to this question is B. "If you searched all the East, you'd find no girl with greater charm than Thisbe"
Explanation:
In literature, characterization involves using details to explain the traits of characters, this includes their personality, physical traits, qualities, among others. This literary device can be seen in the excerpt "If you searched all the East, you'd find no girl with greater charm than Thisbe" because, in this, the narrator describes Thisbe, who is one main character of the story. Also, the narrator focuses on one important trait of this character, which is her greater charm that according to the narrator could only be found in Thisbe.
Answer:
"Newton's rules explain how gravity affects objects"
Explanation:
Simple heuristic:
Descriptions of quality (interesting, famous, brilliant) are always subject to the context (person, time period, entity, etc).
Newton's rules of gravity are NOT subject to context, thus objective.