Answer:
All hands on deck is an example of synecdoche. Give us at the present time our daily bread may be a famous synecdoche that's always used. Lend me your ears and grey beard are other examples. And also the phrase new set of wheels may be a example of synecdoche
Answer: B. I love to eat chocolate covered pretzels.
Explanation: A hyphen is a punctuation mark with various uses in english, like separate syllables and join words. In the given sentences, the one that needs a hyphen is option b, "I love to eat chocolate covered pretzels", it should be: "I love to eat chocolate-covered pretzels, without the hyphen we can't tell if they are referring to chocolate pretzels that are covered, of pretzels that are covered with chocolate.
Answer:
1. It reflected the purpose of her speech as it provided clarity for her determination to protect her kingdom against European powers/invaders.
2. The main goal of the crusades by the Europeans was to install a Catholic ruler in England and this was resisted by Queen Elizabeth 1 who wanted England to be a Protestant or Anglican state.
Explanation:
Parallelism is the use of the same grammatical structure in a text. It provides contrast and balance in the text. It also helps to establish clarity in the intentions of the writer. Queen Elizabeth 1 made good use of parallelism by providing contrasts and comparing the things she could tolerate and the ones that could not be tolerated. Her speech is made up of contrasts used in the same lines to make her points stand out and to remove any doubts in the minds of her subjects.
For example, she said that she was there as a monarch 'not for her recreation or disport but for the heat of the battle, and if necessary to die for her subjects'. This would make her intentions stand out in the hearts of her subjects.
I believe the best answer here is A. it uses imperfect coordinating structure.
Chinua Achebe was a Nigerian novelist. He had a title of chieftain of Igbo tribe and wrote novels about its customs. That was portrayed as sophisticated, passed down through generations.
Westerners may mistaken them as ‘primitive and savage’. But Achebe showed Igbo people's rich cultural background through his narrations. Igbo proverbs, ‘the art of conversation", were frequently quoted in his novels.
The non-violent nature of Igbo was demonstrated by events like the peaceful agreement with the Mbaino tribe during a murder in Igbo by a Mbaino man.