Root word
Base word
Base word
Base word
Root word
Root word
Root word
Root word
Root word
Root word
Basically, a root word is any word with a suffix or a prefix.
Answer:
Used primarily in Anglo-Saxon poetry, the epic poem Beowulf is full of kennings. For example, the term whale-road is used for the sea and "shepherd of evil" is used for Grendel. Other well known kennings include "battle sweat" for blood; "raven harvest" for corpse; and "sleep of the sword" for death.
All of the animals on the farm are called for a meeting.
When somebody puts " ing " at the end of a word (verbs) its become " happening " for example: watch- watching * present noun.
And to it's in future like I'm going to sleep it's when you are going to do it
The repetition of the word “whirl” creates a sense of "intensity".
"Oread", one of Hilda Doolittle’s best-known lyrics, which was first distributed in the issue of BLAST in 1914, serves to outline this early style well. The title Oread was included after the piece was first composed, to propose that a nymph was ordering up the ocean. Here is the short poem, (One of my favorites);
Whirl up, sea—
whirl your pointed pines,
splash your great pines
on our rocks,
hurl your green over us,
cover us with your pools of fir.