the answer is not noun clause i just took the test and got it wrong i dont know the answer but if this helped in any way please like and vote
Answer:
A. Swimming
Explanation:
"Child Harold's pilgrimage is a poem written by Lord Byron which was published between 1812-1818. The stanza describes the pleasure and terrors of swimming. The speaker believes that people have no control over the sea. the central theme can be said to be the permanence of the ocean.
The rhyme scheme of the poem is ababab cdcdd efefef. the poem made Byron to say "i awoke one morning and found myself famous." this shows that the poem brought fame to Byron.
The poem is written in the "Spenserian stanza. the spenserian stanza contains eight iambic pantemetre lines followed by a twelve syllabic iambic line known as alexandrie. The poem also created romantic archetype known as the "Bryomic hero"
Answer:the teacher explained the rubrics to the student
Explanation:
Answer:
The first sentence if modified can make the paragraph into a stronger argumentative speech.
Explanation:
Current opening sentence: Genetically modified foods unequally benefit rich countries, including the United States.
Revised opening sentence: Rich countries including the United States currently enjoy more benefits from the production and sale of Genetically Modified Foods than developing nations.
So the complete paragraph looks like this:
<em>Rich countries including the United States currently enjoy more benefits from the production and sale of Genetically Modified Foods than developing nations. The USDA reports that the US gained the vast majority of the total world benefit from new herbicide-tolerant soybeans in 1997. In addition, the US company that created the soybeans charged farmers a technology fee. These high adoption costs will continue to limit the benefits of genetically modified crops to rich countries that do not need the higher yields, rather than extending them to poorer nations that do.</em>
<em />
In revising the first paragraph, we are able to go in with a stronger argument or hook which is critical to an argumentative essay.
Cheers
<em />