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Answer:
When Milo asks it to wait, he answered with his weight.
Explanation:
This bird has untidy feathers, long beaks and grey. It liked chaos and was a nuisance. Ironically, he is from a place called context and yet he likes to take every speech out of context. He twists what people say.
As an example in this story, after the bird flies away, Milo shouts at it to wait but the bird replied out of context by saying thirty four pounds which is weight.
To conclude is to have enough information to make a conclusion
isnt it
Answer:
C. “But the fact is I was napping, and so gently you came rapping, / And so faintly you came tapping, tapping at my chamber door,”
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C. The rhyme gives the poem an even rhythm and maintains the tension.
Explanation:
1. None of the other options give as much tension as these lines do. The anticipation and reptition of the lines intensify the action of approaching a chamber door.
2. I feel as though the other options don't quite work as well as this one. A rhyme doesnt necessarily make a poem easier to remember, lines that are more 'significant' is just subjective, and each rhyme doesnt necessarily end an idea.