Answer:
Explanation:
1. 1&3
2.B The Dasaris are seeking to improve on last year's Scripps bee by having one clear winner this year.
3.B because eighth-graders who qualified this year should be allowed to compete next year
4. C. the logistical challenges of hosting a virtual bee
Answer: The mood
Explanation:The emotional atmosphere that a poem creates is known as mood.
Mood of a poem depends on the poet him/herself, their choice of words, background information, their personal feelings, etc. Mood can be happy, sad, melancholic, depressing, ecstatic - it can be anything a poet wants it to be.
(I hope this helps gob bless and have a good day friend me because i give out points every other Fridays )
Peace and hair grease ✌
1) <span> The specific differences that I noticed in the two performances mentioned above are that t</span>he first one was very touching and totally emotional, I bet that the author wanted to make us go through this perfomance in the shouse of the characters but because of this decision it was kind of hard to concentrate on the words. In the seconfd performance these two points (emotional and textual) are balanced so it was more holistic.
2) The way how Michael Pennington reaches out to you as the audience in his performance of Hamlet's soliloquy is his personal attitude he expressed to those who came to watch it by looking right at the camera while delivering his soliloquy.
3) There is no photo or excerpt of the page that you have to analyze, and I can depend only on the Speech: “Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears” from Julius Caesar, spoken by Marc Antony. I think that any of line should be rid, or changed in tone, because this is the major point that shapes and reveals the Antony's character who is considered as a <span>superficial man.
Hope that helps!</span>
Personification (ex: the curtains danced)
Answer:
The description of setting in paragraph 7 of "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" is important to the theme of America's changing history in that it depicts Sleepy Hollow as a "drowsy" place caught in the past while great "currents" of change go on around it.