Answer:
The first one uses commas correctly.
Hope this helps!
Mark me brainliest if I'm right :)
Answer:
The answer is D
Explanation:
It is the only line centered around death and the main focus (being the captain) and it's just mostly obvious context clues. Don't stress out the poems, they're easy if you don't think too hard on them.
Answer: They think their on top of the world and they also think they can dominate any other race so i would say domination.
Answer:
1. My backpack weighs a ton. ------- hyperbole
2. The daisies danced in the rain ------- personification
3. Your eyes are like stars ------- simile
4. She is a monster ------- metaphor
Explanation:
1. <u>Hyperbole</u><u>:</u> Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.
2. <u>Personi</u><u>fication</u><u>:</u> The attribution of a personal nature or human characteristics to something non-human, or the representation of an abstract quality in human form.
3. <u>Simile</u><u>:</u> A figure of speech involving the comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind, used to make a description more emphatic or vivid (e.g. as brave as a lion).
4. <u>Meta</u><u>phor</u><u>:</u> A metaphor is a figure of speech that describes an object or action in a way that isn't literally true, but helps explain an idea or make a comparison. ... A metaphor states that one thing is another thing. It equates those two things not because they actually are the same, but for the sake of comparison or symbolism.
Malory himself was ostensibly a member of the nobility, and yet he was accused of various crimes ranging from ambush to r*pe during his life, and he died in jail. This is one example of how the chivalric codes portrayed in the literature of the period were not adhered to as strongly in real life.This period was also characterized by the ‘war of the roses’ in which England was inflicted by a civil war, something that the homosocial bonds in the Arthurian court does not reflect, although the civil war with Mordred does.
<span>What was the nobility like in Sir Thomas Malory time and how was it like and unlike the noble knights he wrote about</span>