Answer:
Yes mate!!!!! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Answer:
Explanation:
<u>Tanka poems always have a structure, but not the rhyme.</u>
They follow the pattern of syllables which goes like this:
- line - 5 syllables
- line - 7 syllables
- line - 5 syllables
- line - 7 syllables
- line - 7 syllables
It is very similar to haiku, but a bit longer and more elaborate. It also uses metaphors and allusions, and no punctuation.
<u>Even when translated on English it doesn't seem to us tanka has a structured form, we must know that on the original Japanese version it is structured with the model showed above.</u>
D is the correct answer. You can omit as many words as you want, as long as 'the meaning and spirit of the quote is retained', that is, the general sense you wanted to convey with that quote is still there, even after you deleted those several words.
Answer:
In the 1970s, about half of all deaf children in America attended special schools, many of which immersed them in sign language. Today, 80 percent of deaf children attend ordinary local schools, and more than half of kids born with hearing impairments receive cochlear implants, with the proportion rising every year. A dramatic shift is under way in the American experience of deafness. To many who are hard of hearing, this shift represents not a victory over disability, but the dissolution of a thriving culture—what they call Deaf culture, with a capital
Hopelessness and Death VS. Hope and Life is different because when you're hopeless death will strike quicker but with hope you could live longer. I hope this helps.