Mama does not approve of the Stevenses. Since they are Quakers, she considers them to be both "heathens" and "abolitionists", and she "forbids the children to have anything to do with them
Since gerunds function the same way as nouns, they can be used as subjects, direct object, indirect object, or complement. In the same way that nouns can never function as verbs, a gerund can never serve as the main verb, too. If you use a word in the -ing form, it's no longer a gerund, it's called the present participle. What's the difference between gerunds and present participles?
Gerund: <em>Reading </em>books calm me.
Present Participle: She is <em>reading </em>books assigned to her by the teacher.
Answer:
"Your Little Voice" uses imagery in the lines "over time//and tide and death//leaping", conveying the sadness of the death through comparing the voice to the movement of wind and waves. "Grandma Ling" uses imagery in the lines: "to take to heart the eldest daughter//of her youngest son a quarter century away", by comparing the distance in time and geography as well as in cultural differences, to express the emotional distance between families far apart.
1. The Nautilus runs aground.
2.A,L, and C receive permission to go on the island.
3.A,L, and C find and eat coconuts.
4.Ned Land prepares bread fruit.
5.A,L, and C gather fruit: bananas, mangoes, and pineapples.
6.A,L, and C return to ship at sundown.
7.A,L, and C see no one on the Nautilus.
8.A,L, and C return to the island.
9.C catches a bird of paradise Aronnax.
10.A,L, and C spot and kill a hog and a dozen small "kangaroo rabbits".
11.A,L, and C are attacked by natives and run for the ship.
Hope this helps!
The counterclaim always goes after the claim