She imagines the boar “running heavily through the trees, ignoring the sharp thorns and briers that raked his back…”. Jenny then sees the boar in an even better way; h<span>er wild imagination even leads to a conclusion that the boar has a “... golden horn on his terrible head.” </span>
The type of pronoun used in the above sentence is a RELATIVE PRONOUN.
The relative pronoun is found in the beginning of the adjective phrase. The adjective phrase describes the noun.
In the above sentence the adjective phrase is: WHICH IS SOMETIMES CALLED THE RED PLANET.
It describes the noun MARS.
The relative pronoun used is WHICH.
Answer:
Part A: is the first one which is - Anne wants to confide in other people, but she finds people less accepting than a page in her diary.
Part B: is the second one which is: "And now I come to the root of the matter, the reason for my starting this diary: it is that I have no such real friend . . . I want this diary itself to be my friend, and I shall call my friend Kitty."
A Windstorm in the Forest begins by depicting the wind as a maternal figure. As if tending to children, “the winds go to every tree, fingering every leaf and branch and furrowed bole … [seeking] and [finding] them all, caressing them tenderly, bending them in lusty exercise, stimulating their growth, plucking off a leaf or limb as required” (55). The trees resemble infants who are reliant on their mothers to make them strong, living symbiotically with the wind; the trees eventually reap cool shade, clean oxygen and protection for the soil below in return for the winds’ breezes.