Answer:
The two lines, hear the mellow bells Golden bells, use assonance. They echo.
Explanation:
An amount/number of something
Quantitative describes the quantity of something
Qualitative describes the quality of something
Answer:
1. I have my car fixed.
- This is not the correct way to write this. It would make sense if it was "I am going to have my car fixed." However, the word "have" is present tense. That means you are currently having your car being fixed.
2. I had my car fixed.
- This is the correct way to write this. The word "had" is past tense. That means you already fixed your car.
Explanation:
Remember that "have" is a helping verb, and "had" is the past participle. "Have" is a present form while "had" is the past form.
<span>We saw <em>The Hunger Games</em> this weekend, and we loved it!
This sentence uses italics correctly, if indeed the original question showed the title of the movie in italics. Essays should be in quotations, and the final sentence is missing the end quotation mark, so this is the only option of a correct answer if the title is italicized. </span>
Answer: Personification in this poem shows how even inanimate objects such as the dew and the grain were wary or afraid of death. This adds a sense that the character is in a carrage with something very fearful, yet her manner of writing does not seem to hint at her fear.
"We passed the Fields of Gazing Grain"
"The Dews drew quivering and Chill"