Answer:
You have the question and you have the answer, what more do you want?
Thank you for serving our country to ensure our freedom and rights! I will always appreciate you and the others who have served. Your sacrifice can never be repaid but your service will never be forgotten.
Exposition: The author believes she was a bat in her previous life.
Rising Action: She recalls visions of her past life through nightmares of being a bat but being treated poorly.
Climax: She states that bats are seen in a negative way because of how they're associated with darkness and vampires. They are treated terribly by humans to the point of being used for war.
Falling Action: The author comes to the conclusion that she may have become a human in her current life to teach people that bats aren't so bad.
Resolution: She hopes to return to being a bat in her next life.
Answer:
1 i belive is Athena im not positive though
Explanation:
Answer:
There are many ironic elements throughout the text.
Explanation:
In "Rip Van Winkle," Washington Irving uses figurative language that conveys secret and obscured messages left to readers to discover.
While there is a description of a<em> “curtain lecture”</em> as “worth all the sermons in the world for teaching the virtues of patience and long-suffering.”, which should describe how Dame Van Winkle's lecturing teaches patience, the real message underneath it is that this type of nagging is not valuable at all.
<em>The story describes how Dame Van Winkle often lectures and nags him:</em>
“… his wife kept continually dinning in his ears about his idleness, his carelessness, and the ruin he was bringing on his family. Morning, noon, and night, her tongue was incessantly going, and everything he said or did was sure to produce a torrent of household eloquence.”
These are just some of the examples which Washington Irving uses as <em>humor and irony</em> to show the relationship between Rip and his wife.