<span>Irony is the appearance of one's sense by means of language that usually means the opposite, classically for funny or unequivocal effect.
Mrs. Crater thinks she is having a son-in-law, when in detail Mr. Shiftlet get her vehicle, her cash, and deserts her daughter at a diner.</span>
Answer:
protuberances - example
avarice - antonym
inundation - definition/explanation
Explanation:
The type of context clue that helps the reader determine the meaning of the word protuberances is example. Following the word protuberance is a list of protuberances: "rocks, bushes, and ledges". These are all examples.
For avarice, the context clue used is antonym. Initially the speaker says he's going to be generous, but then he uses the signal word "instead" to show that avarice is a contrast to generous. Avarice is greed.
The word inundation is further defined or explained when the rest of the sentence explains the water flooding streets and basements.
adverb is a word that describes when, for how long, or how often a certain action happened.
<u>Answer</u>:
There are no line breaks, since this is a prose poem
<u>Explanation:</u>
Literally Prose poem does not have line breaks. But while reading this kind of prose poem, the reader themselves will take a break not because of the punctuation but because of the breaks in the theme. In the poem Adolescence, the author draws a parallel between birds and human adolescence.
Here the nature of a caged bird is compared to the nature of the society as a child is trapped into an invisible cage called society. Hence while reading this poem, the reader takes a break while reflecting the fact but not of the punctuation. That is how Nin Andrews used enjambment and line length in his prose poem.