For this, I'll just say you chose "word watcher". I think I read maybe the first few chapters in this book last year. This book was actually quite confusing to me. I guess it was just the names that threw me off. Here is a sample off what you can say:
There are many details from this story that are worthy to share in a literary discussion. For this story, I chose word watcher as my character role. Using my role, I would discuss the different names and their meanings for a literary discussion. In the story, the author used different names. For example, the main character's name was "moon shadow lee". My reading role greatly helped me better understand the story. Rather than skimming through the book, I was able to slow down and recognize the different words and names the author uses. For example, the main characters father, "wind rider" was a kit maker. "wind rider" was a good name for him, because it really described, what he does and aspires to do. <span />
First, pick a feeling. This could be as vague and easy as anger~sadness~excitement~fear, or as nuanced as contentment... etc.
Then go through your senses and find words and concepts that remind you of that feeling. ie, Anger:
-FEEL the beating heart and heat in face and blood, the sweaty palms
-HEAR a ringing in your ears, or a shout you make
-SEE your vision become tunnely and closed off, or your face go read
-TASTE metallic in your mouth, or blood, or a food that reminds you of a time you were angry
etcetera.
Now, think of words that'll describe those senses. A beating heart is POUNDING and DEAFENING...
The feeling is your MOOD, establish this first ("I was angry"). Then use the descriptive WORDS to describe the SENSES.
Answer:
the tone is very sad and not uplifting because it is a very said choice of words.
Explanation:
True. If you have all the information in the thesis statement then you won't have anything to put in the essay itself.
Answer:
An archetype of Good Mother.
An anonymous Vietnamese mother.
Mirikitani's grandmother.
Explanation:
Janice Mirikitani's poem "Attack the Water" is a short, stacked poem about her own grandmother and how she resembles the face of a woman she saw in a newspaper. The poem shows the suffering and pain of war, especially during the Vietnam war.
In the poem, Mirikitani recounts how the face of an old woman she saw in a newspaper resembles that of her grandmother. Obachan, the Japanese word for grandmother, took care to feed the younger ones, even "eat[ing]" maggot-infested rice to feed the children. This picture of maternal love and care is significant for the grandmother represents an archetype of a mother, while the man source of all this imagination is an anonymous Vietnamese mother. It also took the speaker back to her own grandmother.
Thus, the correct answers are the first, second, and fourth options.