I would say what are you asking???
“Concrete Mixers” by Patricia Hubbell compares concrete mixers to elephants to show humans have created relationships with their machines in much the same way as with animals under their care. The poet shows how the drivers of the concrete mixers wash and tend to their mixers just as the mahout take care of their elephants. This comparison is set up at the beginning of the poem with this simile: “Like elephant tenders they hose them down.” To continue this relationship, the poet describes the concrete drivers as “mahouts”, the name for people who take care of elephants in other countries. The poem also describes how the concrete mixers “stand in muck”, meaning that these machines are in muddy environments similar to the environments of elephants who stand in mud or muck.In the end the poet describes how the concrete mixers are like elephants working to do humans’ work by lifting, moving and helping to create new structures in a city. The poet uses several similes to describe concrete mixers as if they were alive: “Concrete mixers/Move like elephants/Bellow like elephants/Spray like elephants” She further strengthens the effect by writing that they “…are urban elephants/Their trunks are raising a city.” This metaphor means that just as elephants work for humans in
Poetry Collection 3 other countries, the machines in the poem are doing the labor of building a city. The poet uses the word “raising” to show that the city is being built up, becoming taller and taller with skyscrapers. Through the effective use of figurative language the poet shows how humans have begun to treat their machines as if they were living, breathing animal
https://www.coursehero.com/file/p6fqalm/Concrete-mixers-Move-like-elephants-Bellow-like-elephants-Spray-like-elephants/
Answer:
Answer choice (C), yet
Explanation:
On the list of conjunctions, there is and, but, or, yet, etc. But what about the other choices? Well, (A), the word is which is just the word be, but third person, so it is not a conjunction. (B), student, is a noun, not a conjunction. (D), she, is also a noun. And lastly, (E), the word good, is an adjective, not a conjunction. Therefore, it is (C), yet. Hope this helps!
Answer: It is about both Eliza and Matildas mother.
Explanation:
They both “supped” which means to spoon in great amounts. They supped sadness, meaning they had just experienced some sort of tragedy and it overwhelmed their senses and it was all they could do, mourning essentially became their main focus.
Okay so I'm not the best at poetry so please bare with me.
Answer:(I hope) I believe that 'The Law' of the jungle is not strong just on its own. I mean there has to be people...or animals to support it, to make it stronger. (see what I did there)
It says, "For the strength of the Pack is the wolf, and the strength of the Wolf is the Pack." They both support each other which make the law stronger.
((Hope this helps))