Answer:
Explanation:
Walter Dean Myers’s stunning Coretta Scott King Award-winning novel, Fallen Angels, about the Vietnam War, was published in 1988. Twenty years later, Walter has written a riveting contemporary companion, Sunrise Over Fallujah, that again shows the devastating personal realities of war.
In Fallen Angels we met 17-year-old Richie Perry, a soldier in the Vietnam War. Now, in Sunrise Over Fallujah, set in 2003, Walter introduces us to Robin “Birdy” Perry, Richie’s nephew, a kid from Harlem, who comes face to face with war’s ugliest sides - and recounts this in letters to his Uncle Richie. Through Robin’s account, we begin to understand the realities behind the headlines - about the horror of war, and what war means to young people and their families.
The symbolism used in the love song of J. Alfred Prufrock is meant to connect the everyday existence of a student living in an urban setting to the expectations which society upholds without reflection. As such, the lack of meaning that the main character of the poem fails to find in his studies is directly correlated to the absurd expectations which the greater part of his education forces down on him. These verses says this most clearly: ¨No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant to be; Am an attendant lord, one that will do, To swell a progress, start a scene or two¨
The answer is context clues. This is because you're using the clues from the other words (sentences/paragraphs) to answer the definition of the word.
A word or phrase naming an attribute, added or grammatically related to a noun to modify or describe it.
Hope that helps :)