He is passively accepting his fate
Answer:
> Kyle is funny, handsome, and outgoing. (3 adjectives)
> On our vacation we are planning to go skiing, snowshoeing, and snowboarding. (3 gerunds/nouns)
> Sasha enjoys watching movies, eating sushi, and playing basketball. (3 verbs)
Explanation:
The correct response is “Unless Congress acts, most of the tax relief we've delivered over the past 7 years will be taken away”. The president uses this sentence to reveal the seriousness of the situation. It means that if the "other work" is not done, according to the President, the tax relief will be lost. The "other work" claimed in the first sentence is all that needs to be done to avoid this situation from happening.
Answer:
Simile, Personification, hyperbole
Explanation:
simile- Her memory was gone as if she had amnesia
personification: I was trying to keep her memory alive
hyperbole:there were more than 1000 geese in the sky
I also know theres foreshadowing towards the middle of the book telling the readrers how they are going to be in eachothers lives again but I cant remember :/
When I first began reading "The Story of an Hour," Mrs. Mallard seemed to me an old woman and as we are told in the very first line, “afflicted with a heart trouble.” I was surprised in the eighth paragraph when Chopin tells us that "She was young," but even more interesting to me that she is described as having “a fair, calm face, whose lines bespoke repression” which depicts her as being old for her age. The description of this repression is backed up when Chopin gives us the reason for Mrs. Mallard’s “monstrous joy” which reads thus “There would be no powerful will bending hers in that blind persistence with which men and women believe they have a right to impose a private will upon a fellow-creature.”
After reading through this story the first time, I had many questions and many conclusions. For instance, it seems as if Chopin is showing us a social situation of the times with the woman as prisoner of her husband. It is common knowledge that marriages are not always about mutual love between two people and during the time that Chopin was writing, this was more often the case. Marriage was as much about monetary comfort, social status and acceptance as it was about possible love. There are no children mentioned in this story which makes me wonder if there was a sexual relationship between the Mallards. It seems from the description that Mrs. Mallard has been trapped in this marriage for a long time even though we know she is young. How young is she? Even though I say she is trapped, do not misunderstand me: I do not think this marriage is arranged, instead that she has been coerced by her society to marry despite what she may want to do in her heart and soul. I believe she does love her husband, but it is possible to love a man and not be married to him. This was not her case; if she were able (meaning a man would agree with her decision) and she did engage in a loving relationship with a man who was not her husband, she would have certainly been looked down upon. Is her heart condition purely physical or is it also psychological and emotional? We know the stereotypes, as Chopin did, that women are hysterical, timid, weak, irrational. Could it be that her heart condition is created by those tip-toeing around her in conjunction with her own emotional weaknesses?