The answer is: And I'm going to show you that it ain't no trouble when you pack double."
Colloquialism is the use of vernacular language —which is the everyday usage of a language by common people. This includes common parlance and common expressions, as you would encounter them on the streets spoken by any given person, which manifest the peculiarities and modifications to which a language is subjected, morphologically and syntactically, in a certain period of time and place.
The effect of the underlined section in developing the tone
of this excerpt from "In a Queen's Domain" by Sarah Morgan Bryan
Piatt is it helps to change the tone of the poem from calm and carefree to
sinister and menacing.
Answer:
B
Explanation:
I dont know. It isn't directing to who it is.
Answer:
1.I will be trying my best to win the match.
2.Have you visited chitwan national park
3.why they have displayed the new promo
4.she never prefers coffee to tea
5.we already have finished our work
The introduction and the history of the talisman is the initial rising action in the W. W. Jacobs short story, "The Monkey's Paw." The Whites inherit the paw from their acquaintance, Sergeant-Major Morris, who reveals the mysterious past of the shriveled hand. When he throws it into the fireplace, Mr. White retrieves it. Morris warns them to wish wisely before leaving for the night.
The rising action continues as Mr. White makes his first wish.
"I wish for two hundred pounds," said the old man distinctly.
Mr. White feels the paw move, and a depressing feeling of uneasiness falls upon the family for the remainder of the night. The next morning, Mr. and Mrs. White are paid a visit from the company where their son, Herbert, works. He has been killed in a grisly accident--"caught in the machinery"--and the Whites are offered a compensation of 200 pounds. Although it could be argued that this is the climax to the story, the action actually continues to rise a bit longer as the Whites exercise their second wish--for Herbert to be alive again. The rising action peaks when the Whites realize that their less-than-specific wish has an alternate possibility--that Herbert may be revived but in his deathly, crippled state.