I encountered this question before. The underlined idiom was "SHE PUT HER NOSE TO THE FIRE". This question also had choices. These were:
<span>She was cold as she wrote her speech, so she sat by the fire.
She worked hard to finish her speech for the assembly.
She was proud of the speech once she finished it.
She finished the speech in a very short amount of time.
The underlined idiom tells the reader that SHE FINISHED THE SPEECH IN A VERY SHORT AMOUNT OF TIME.
When you put your nose to the fire, you don't last long because of the heat. Thus, you only spend a short amount of time putting your nose to the fire.</span>
Melinda "Mel" Sordino is the main character and narrator of Laurie Halse Anderson's 1999 novel Speak. Her last name, Sordino, is an Italian word that can be translated as "deaf." The character's ordeals were based on Anderson's own experiences; she was raped one summer prior to starting high school.
Answer:
Me: OOOOOO have to record thisssssss this is some real teaaaaaa
Explanation:
Chapter 29 of The Grapes of Wrath is an "inner" chapter and, therefore, short and lyrical in style. It is also a Biblical-styled chapter, as it depicts the Great Flood that is used as counterpoint to the Dust Bowl chapters earlier. Steinback makes use of pathetic fallacy (weather to depict emotional tone) as the apocalyptic weather is a kind of purgation--an excessive baptism that brings death across the land.
<u>Answer:</u>
Slow is too quick as always is to never.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Slow is the antonym of quick. ‘Slow’ means less than the expected speed whereas ‘quick’ means doing something at great speed. An antonym is a word that is opposite in meaning to the given word.
A synonym is a word similar in meaning to the given word. The same relation of ‘opposites’ works between the other two words too. Always means ‘forever’ whereas ‘never’ means ‘not in the present, past or future’.
So, the analogy explains the relation between the two words of the two groups very well.