The correct answer is:
The excerpt builds suspense as part of the rising action.
This excerpt is providing us relevant incidents that create suspense, interest, and tension in this narrative. Usually In literary works, a rising action includes all decisions, characters' flaws, and background circumstances that together create turns and twists leading to a climax.
Answer: Rhetoric is one great art comprised of five lesser arts: inventio, dispositio, elocutio, memoria, and pronunciatio." Rhetoric is "speech designed to persuade."
He described three main forms of rhetoric: Ethos, Logos, and Pathos. In order to be a more effective writer and speaker, you must understand these three terms.
I would say the correct answer is <span>C) "Prophet!" said I, "thing of evil!—prophet still, if bird or devil!
By that Heaven that bends above us—by that God we both adore—
Tell this soul with sorrow laden if, within the distant Aidenn,
It shall clasp a sainted maiden whom the angels name Lenore—
Clasp a rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore."
Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore."
As you can see in this stanza, the narrator is talking to the Raven and asking him if he will ever see his beloved Lenore again, to which the Raven says his usual, Nevermore. It shows us that the speaker cannot forget and get over his lost love and probably never will. </span>
The answer is B. Epics reflect the values of a culture. The hero in the epic is always the quintessential man. He is strong and brave and seeks adventure to better himself and his people. All men must strive to be like the epic hero. The monster in the epic is the representation of the Other; the thing that no man must ever be. They are often grotesque, break the rules, defy taboos and are inferior.
With the other options, epics were originally spoken and are now written down (not the other way), epics have vast settings far from the localized area, and hero's do not have inner struggles in epics because they are perfect.
In "Sixteen" by Maureen Daly, the narrator expresses how she is an intuitive teenage girl; she knows the trends, and she is up-to-date with the world. She also immediately insists that "I’m not so really dumb. I know what a girl should do and what she shouldn’t". Not only does she describe what she should and shouldn't wear, when she arrives at the skating rink she describes the sky and her surroundings, implying that she is highly detail oriented.
After she states twice that she was not a "dumb" girl, and giving reasons why she wasn't, we realize she was trying to reassure herself of the fact. All logic is out the window once she mets with her love interest, and she feels dumb for believing that he would call her; "for all of a sudden I know, what the stars knew all the time ---- he’ll never, never call --- never".