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Tems11 [23]
3 years ago
8

In "Woo'd and Married and A by Joanna Baille, what is the father looking for in his daughter's mate? A) O a sympathetic man B) a

wealthy man C) an adventurous and bold man D) patient and steady man
English
2 answers:
Darina [25.2K]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

C

Explanation:

In "Woo'd and Married and A by Joanna Baille, he's looking for an adventurous and bold man.

nikitadnepr [17]3 years ago
4 0

c

I remember when I was answering that quaestion lol

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From who's point of view is "Oh Deer" written? How did the author help develop the character's point of view?
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Answer:

This is for 5th grade not high school.

Explanation:

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Lamb is a proper noun or comon noun​
alexdok [17]

Answer:

proper noun

Explanation:

Proper nouns are alike nouns, just more specific. Proper nouns gives you the actual name of the person, place, thing, or idea. Using the example “Mary had a little lamb,” the word Mary is a proper noun whereas lamb is just a noun.

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Character analyses: The observation of the characters traits, personality (maybe), conflicts they have and the roles they play in a story. 
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4 years ago
In "The Road Not Taken" is about a walk in the woods. What is the meaning of the poem on a deeper level?
klemol [59]
Frost claims that he wrote this poem about his friend Edward Thomas, with whom he had walked many times in the woods near London. Frost has said that while walking they would come to different paths and after choosing one, Thomas would always fret wondering what they might have missed by not taking the other path. 

About the poem, Frost asserted, "You have to be careful of that one; it's a tricky poem - very tricky." And he is, of course, correct. The poem has been and continues to be used as an inspirational poem, one that to the undiscerning eye seems to be encouraging self-reliance, not following where others have led. 

But a close reading of the poem proves otherwise. It does not moralize about choice, it simply says that choice is inevitable but you never know what your choice will mean until you have lived it. 

First Stanza – Describes Situation 

The poem consists of four stanzas. In the first stanza, the speaker describes his position. He has been out walking the woods and comes to two roads, and he stands looking as far down each one as he can see. He would like to try out both, but doubts he could to that, so therefore he continues to look down the roads for a long time trying to make his decision about which road to take. 

Second Stanza – Decides to Take Less-Traveled Road 

He had looked down the first one “to where it bent in the undergrowth,” and in the second stanza, he reports that he decided to take the other path, because it seemed to have less traffic than the first. But then he goes on to say that they actually were very similarly worn. The second one that he took seems less traveled, but as he thinks about it, he realizes that they were “really about the same.” Not exactly that same but only “about the same.” 

Third Stanza – Continue Description of Roads 

The third stanza continues with the cogitation about the possible differences between the two roads. He had noticed that the leaves were both fresh fallen on them both and had not been walked on, but then again claims that maybe he would come back and also walk the first one sometime, but he doubted he would be able to, because in life one thing leads to another and time is short. 

Fourth Stanza – Two Tricky Words 

The fourth stanza holds the key to the trickiness of the poem: 

I shall be telling this with a sigh 

Somewhere ages and ages hence: 

Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— 

I took the one less traveled by, 

And that has made all the difference. 

Those who interpret this poem as suggesting non-conformity take the word “difference” to be a positive difference. But there is nothing in the poem that suggests that this difference signals a positive outcome. The speaker could not offer such information, because he has not lived the “difference” yet. 

The other word that leads non-discerning readers astray is the word “sigh.” By taking “difference” to mean a positive difference, they think that the sigh is one of nostalgic relief; however, a sigh can also mean regret. There is the “oh, dear” kind of sigh, but also the “what a relief” kind of sigh. Which one is it? We do not know. If it is the relief sigh, then the difference means the speaker is glad he took the road he did; if it is the regret sigh, then the difference would not be good, and the speaker would be sighing in regret. But the plain fact is we do not know what that sigh is. Again, the speaker of the poem does not even know the nature of that sigh, because that sigh and his evaluation of the difference his choice will make are still in the future. It is a truism that any choice we make is going to make “all the difference” in how our future turns out.
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Answ

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Explanation:

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