Answer:
Explanation:
click the file it has the writing for you to copy
Answer:
The answer will be multiple-part.
Explanation:
"Your courage to the sticking place" is a well-known statement - from Shakespeare's play Macbeth. The idiom screw... to the sticking place - if you do some research - is defined as "being firm and resolute in... (in this case, courage)." This echoes Shakespeare's ambitious nature - as is shown in a poetic style.
The rest of this paragraph reflects that aspect of him as well. Such words as:
Wassail
Warder
Limbeck
Swinish
Spongy
Quell
Though seemingly just part of the nature of poetry, these words may spark images in your mind that typical, everyday words otherwise don't.
I hope you can gather a lot of info from all of that! Tell me if you need any further assistance...
( :
Descriptive words. Bring them into the mood. Not sure if that's the
exact word they would look for, but that's what I've been told.
I think it's B, but I can't guarantee it... Sorry
Answer:
The correct answer is that the part that is ironic from this statement is : "Sickeningly comic aspect of an unfunny situation."
Explanation:
This is ironic because in a sitaution that seemed funny or wwas supposed to be funny it was the complete oposite. Sometimes irony can be very direct on the conflicting definitions of a few words.