The above question wants to analyze your reading and writing ability, through a summary written by you. For this reason, I cannot write this summary, but I will show you how to write it.
First, you should know that a summary is a short and quick text, which shows the most important parts to understand a text that you have read previously.
In this case, to write this summary you must follow these steps:
- Identify the most important parts to understand it.
- Rewrite these parts, using your own words.
It is important to remember that your question requires the summary to have verbs. Verbs are words that feature actions, such as "speak," "look," "think," "run," and so on.
More info on how to write a summary at the link:brainly.com/question/24858866
A personal narrative essay is about a personal experience, so it is usually written in the first person. To maximize its impact, the essay should: Be written to have an emotional impact on the reader. Include a lot of references to sensory perceptions and emotions.
The noun in this sentence which is uncountable, meaning that it names something that cannot be counted is the noun water.
You cannot count how many waters there are - it is uncountable. The other nouns, students and pitcher are countable, so they cannot be the correct answers, but rather water is.
Answer:
The similarities in the works of both authors showed that they both love nature.
From both literary works, Basho and Wordsworth love nature and this can be seen in their works. They both stated that nature is important as it beautifies the environment and it's vital to our existence.
The difference between their literary works was that while Wordsworth was the partaker in the action and narrator, Basho was an observer. Wordsworth used the first-person point of view
Also, the majority of Woodsworth's words are adjectives while Basho followed the haiku tradition.
Explanation:
Commemorating a defining event.
<span>"Listen, my children, and you shall hear
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,
On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-Five:
Hardly a man is now alive
Who remembers that famous day and year."</span>