The only type of verbal that functions as a modifier is infinitive.
Answer:
In "Shane" when Jack Palance first appears, a stray cur takes one look and slinks away on tiptoes, able, we understand, to recognize something truly dark. So it seems when we appear, crunching through the woods. A robin c*cks her head, then hops off,
ready to
Explanation:
In "Shane" when Jack Palance first appears, a stray cur takes one look and slinks away on tiptoes, able, we understand, to recognize something truly dark. So it seems when we appear, crunching through the woods. A robin c*cks her head, then hops off,
ready to
Answer:
It's when you take a clip or snippet from a passage.
Explanation:
Sometimes in a story it'll say something like "John used to love fishing until one day the fishes stopped coming" how do you think John feels in this excerpt? ←- I dont know if this helps, but it's similar to that.
Out of all the choices, the second choice or B. Sestina seems most accurate.
It would be a sestina poem because both stanzas have six lines, and use six similar words at the end of the lines. (Shade, hills, grass, green, rock, and lady.)
It's definitely not a haiku, because haiku's are very short and consist of three lines. A ballad tells a story in short stanzas, these stanzas are not that short so it would not be a ballad either.