The windows getting smaller.
answer:
supp broskiii,
how have you been? i've really missed you since i moved away. recently, at my new school, we had our terminal exam. and guess what, i did quite well if i must say so myself ! i was pretty surprised at how easy it was, it wasn't anything like what we used to work on together. hopefully, i'll continue to perform well in my exams.
love you kiddo <3
good luck :)
i hope this helps
have a nice day !!
The sentences that expresses the central idea include:
- Music adds an important element to films.
- Composing movie music is a challenging career.
<h3>What is a central idea? </h3>
It should be noted that a central idea simply means the main idea that's conveyed by the author in a literary work.
In this case, the sentences that expresses the central idea include music adds an important element to films and composing movie music is a challenging career.
Learn more about central idea on:
brainly.com/question/2684713
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I believe the correct answer is: "Work without
Hope" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
An epigraph in literature represents a phrase, quotation, or
poem at the beginning of a literary work as a link to the wider literary canon,
which has the function of either inviting the comparison or to enlist a
conventional context.
The epigraph in Kamala Markandaya’s novel “Nectar in a Sieve”
(1954) is:
“Work without hope draws nectar in a sieve,
And hope without an object cannot live.”
This epigraph and the title of Markandaya’s novel represent
last two verses of "Work without Hope" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
and, therefore, allude and converse to that literary work. However, the
epigraph does not answer the question of whether the characters actually have
hope.
hmmm mabye regretting eating all the chocolate in the sock