Four functions will be <span>declarative, interrogative, exclamative, and the imperative.</span>
The correct answer is "a Man". Kipling ends his poem with the line "And—which is more—you'll be a Man, my son!" This indicates that Kipling is addressing his poem to youths who are not yet adults (or even immature adults). The speaker is a father-figure that intends to counsel his son about becoming an adult. The first stanza is about knowing oneself. The second is about knowing that we not always get what we want. The thirs is about being brave. The third is about knowing one's place in the world.
Answer:
Warcross
Explanation:
Emika Chen is a teenage hacker who hacks into an opening ceremony game, to earn cash quick. She accidentially glitches <em>into</em> the game. Once the creator, Hideo Tanaka, sees, he flies her out to Tokyo, to catch a hacker, who is trying to stop Hideo's plans. Emika, get's drafted onto a Warcross team, to hide in plain sight. Emika and Hideo form a relationship, far more than business. She has to stop Zero, the hacker, from ruining the Warcross empire. But, that's not what it's all about. Emika, finds out Hideo's true plans, and she finds out what Zero's goals are. She also finds out Zero's identity; Sasuke Tanaka, Hideo's kidpanned brothere. She has to decide which side to take.
It leaves the first book on a cliffhanger!!
The phrase that describes facts and details that an author states directly in a text is;
The facts and details that an author directly states in a text are explicit information. Explicit information is plainly described to the audience leaving no room for guessing or deductions.
Implicit pieces of information are those that require the audience to make guesses or interpretations based on the few pieces of information provided.
If, for example, the author states; <em>"That leader was a dictator who had no love for the people", </em>he has provided explicit information. We do not have to interpret the character of the leader.
It is revealed plainly in this piece of information.
Learn more here:
brainly.com/question/11652392