In my opinion, the correct answer is <span>A.)The poem uses figurative language and rhyme to express the speaker's ideas. Shelley uses metaphors, similes, imagery, sound devices such as sibilance, but those features are not typical only for the 19th-century lyric poetry. However, rhyme was used almost regularly. As for the B and C options, they can be applied to poetry from any age. The D option is not at all typical for the 19th-century poetry. Some poets used it (such as Wordsworth in Britain and Whitman in U.S.), but most of them didn't.</span>
Answer:
A) I mean, come on, these parents need to wise up and not be so stupid about the measles! Is the correct answer.
Explanation:
The tone in the first option would be the proper one if the conversation were taking place among friends because it uses informal expressions and words that shouldn't be used when discussing a topic such as disease. So, if the passage is formal, the others fit so A is correct.
<span>Heaney incorporates Old English poetry elements in his modern translation through punctuation. In Old English poetry, one often used half-lines. This means that each line of poetry was split into two half-lines, and in each of these half-lines there were two strongly stressed words, often with the purpose of giving musicality to the poem. Heaney follows this half-line pattern in his modern translation.</span>
Answer:
The adjectival phrases are:
*Wafting from the oven
*Melting in your mouth
*Warm and cozy
Explanation:
An adjectival phrase is a group of words that include an adjective but all together describe a noun or a subject as any other regular adjective, they are commonly used with verbs that finish in "ing" but that are not used as a noun but as an adjective within the complete phrase, "Wafting from the oven " describes the smells, "Melting in your mouth " describes the first bite and "Warm and cozy" describes a feeling.
Answer:
For me personally, I would want the backstory to be a girl who came out to her parents but they didn't except her but the she found a girl and yeah all the stuff. How about you?