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Kaylis [27]
4 years ago
15

What is one effect of

English
1 answer:
Ipatiy [6.2K]4 years ago
8 0

Answer:

A. Alliteration helps keep the meter (it is

sometimes called "alliterative meter").

You might be interested in
5. All of the following are true statements about theme, except:
Elanso [62]

Answer:

i guss theme reveals the author's attitude towards the world.

5 0
3 years ago
"it is very simple to be happy but it is very difficult to be simple". a speech or essay . don't surf in internet. 80 points gra
stepladder [879]

Answer and Explanation:

NOTE: I wrote it in the form of a speech. You said not to use the internet, which I didn't. I just used my previous knowledge and own opinions. Feel free to change or adapt anything to your own opinions and ideas.

"It is very simple to be happy but it is very difficult to be simple"

Some time ago, I saw this cartoon based on the Buddhist philosophy. It showed a person thinking, "I want happiness." Then, a wise Buddhist man came, erased the words "I want," and all there was left was "happiness."

Happiness is achievable, and is probably one of the simplest feelings we may have. Of course, there are different types of happiness. Some types last longer than others, some are more or less intense... There is the happiness of having some ice cream on a hot day. There is the happiness of marrying your partner and buying your first house. There is the happiness of hearing your doctor say you're finally free of cancer.

However, even though happiness in itself may be simple, we are not simple beings. And because we are not simple, the world also ceases to be simple. We see the world according to our own perceptions. The way we perceive the world is nothing but an interpretation of our own complexity. The world, society, tasks, demands, they all look and feel different to different people. If I am anxious, I perceive it all differently than someone who is laid-back.

Therefore, we cannot, or at least should not, think there is a recipe for happiness. The feeling is not a mystery, and I believe everyone has experienced it at some point in life. Still, we are a tapestry of thoughts, worries, fears, traumas. The path to happiness requires some work on ourselves, on the way we perceive the world outside our minds. That path will invariably be different according to each person. Thus, the path is as complicated and unique as can be.

7 0
3 years ago
HELP! If anyone has read the book 1984, can you give me a summary of chapter one and two? It's very hard. (6th grade honors)
Elanso [62]
CHAPTER 1

On a cold day in April of 1984, a man named Winston Smith returns to his home, a dilapidated apartment building called Victory Mansions. Thin, frail, and thirty-nine years old, it is painful for him to trudge up the stairs because he has a varicose ulcer above his right ankle. The elevator is always out of service so he does not try to use it. As he climbs the staircase, he is greeted on each landing by a poster depicting an enormous face, underscored by the words <span>“BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU.”

</span>Winston is an insignificant official in the Party, the totalitarian political regime that rules all of Airstrip One—the land that used to be called England—as part of the larger state of Oceania. Though Winston is technically a member of the ruling class, his life is still under the Party’s oppressive political control. In his apartment, an instrument called a telescreen—which is always on, spouting propaganda, and through which the Thought Police are known to monitor the actions of citizens—shows a dreary report about pig iron. Winston keeps his back to the screen. From his window he sees the Ministry of Truth, where he works as a propaganda officer altering historical records to match the Party’s official version of past events. Winston thinks about the other Ministries that exist as part of the Party’s governmental apparatus: the Ministry of Peace, which wages war; the Ministry of Plenty, which plans economic shortages; and the dreaded Ministry of Love, the center of the Inner Party’s loathsome activities.

From a drawer in a little alcove hidden from the telescreen, Winston pulls out a small diary he recently purchased. He found the diary in a secondhand store in the proletarian district, where the very poor live relatively unimpeded by Party monitoring. The proles,<span> as they are called, are so impoverished and insignificant that the Party does not consider them a threat to its power. Winston begins to write in his diary, although he realizes that this constitutes an act of rebellion against the Party. He describes the films he watched the night before. He thinks about his lust and hatred for a dark-haired girl who works in the Fiction Department at the Ministry of Truth, and about an important Inner Party member named O’Brien—a man he is sure is an enemy of the Party. Winston remembers the moment before that day’s Two Minutes Hate, an assembly during which Party orators whip the populace into a frenzy of hatred against the enemies of Oceania. Just before the Hate began, Winston knew he hated Big Brother, and saw the same loathing in O’Brien’s eyes.
</span>
Winston looks down and realizes that he has written “DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER”<span> over and over again in his diary. He has committed thoughtcrime—the most unpardonable crime—and he knows that the Thought Police will seize him sooner or later. Just then, there is a knock at the door.
</span><span>
CHAPTER 2

</span><span>Winston opens the door fearfully, assuming that the Thought Police have arrived to arrest him for writing in the diary. However, it is only Mrs. Parsons, a neighbor in his apartment building, needing help with the plumbing while her husband is away. In Mrs. Parsons’s apartment, Winston is tormented by the fervent Parsons children, who, being Junior Spies, accuse him of thoughtcrime. The Junior Spies is an organization of children who monitor adults for disloyalty to the Party, and frequently succeed in catching them—Mrs. Parsons herself seems afraid of her zealous children. The children are very agitated because their mother won’t let them go to a public hanging of some of the Party’s political enemies in the park that evening. Back in his apartment, Winston remembers a dream in which a man’s voice—O’Brien’s, he thinks—said to him, “We shall meet in the place where there is no darkness.” Winston writes in his diary that his thoughtcrime makes him a dead man, then he hides the book.</span><span>


The Chapter 1 summary may be a little long and this summary is from another website so you'll want to put it into your own words, but hopefully this will make it easier than trying to do it straight from the book.

Hope this helped :)



</span>
7 0
3 years ago
Which of these people would be the best subject for an essay profiling a hero
grin007 [14]
Where are the answer choices
3 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Can someone help????
damaskus [11]

Answer:

Source 1: primary

Source 2: secondary

Source 3: primary

Source 4: secondary

Source 5: primary

Source 6: primary

Primary sources are usually original thoughts and ideas. Secondary sources are usually thoughts and ideas about a primary source. A movie is a primary source; a video/article review of the movie is a secondary source.

Hope this helps

4 0
3 years ago
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