No because it has 4 lines, the first line should have 5 syllables and it had 4. The second line has 3 syllables when it should have 7. The third line is fine because it has 5 syllables.
Your answers D,because sensory language means <span>In writing, </span>sensory language<span> is a way for a writer to help the reader see or connect with an image, description, action, or scene. </span>Sensory language<span> is </span>language<span> that connects to the five senses (sight, sound, smell, taste, touch) to create an image or description.</span>
Answer:In The Giver, the used of what they referred to as "precise language" is strictly enforced at all times. So, needless to say, the first use of figurative language does not happen until much later, after Jonas meets the Giver. I'm sure that you may have noticed that I referenced the first instance of figurative language on the Theme and Structure page. The first instance of figurative language in The Giver, is used by the titular character of the book. It is used when the Giver tries to explain how them memories burden him by using the example of going downhill on a sled in deep snow. Although, the example is lost on Jonas as he has no idea what any of those things are. Another use of figurative language in The Giver is from page 125-126, when Jonas recalls the memory that the Giver had shared with him that day. He describes the place very vividly., and the figurative language is very slight, as there is not much in this nook, but it does convey to you the imagery presents in the chapter in an easier manner.
Explanation:
The narrator opens the Prologue with a tribute to the beauty of the cycle of life.
Here are the lines that the narrator use to open the prologue:
<em>Whan that Aprill with his </em><em>shoures</em><em> </em><em>soote</em>
<span><em>The </em><em>droghte</em><em> of March hath </em><em>perced</em><em> to the </em><span><em>roote</em>
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</span>This lines indicates the changing seasons that describe the return of the spring season. From the options given above, <span>the beauty of the cycle of life is the only one that make sense.</span>