Answer:
Although you have not put in the texts necessary for this question to be answered, we can say that the purpose and the audience present whether a text should be structured and provide details in a more academic and technical way, or more simple and accessible by different people.
Explanation:
The writing of Jon Winthrop and Jonathan Edwards has different structures and details, due to their purposes and the audience they want to reach with the writing.
This must be established by any writer, because when it is desired to reach a more mature audience academically and a member of a specific class within society, a more complex text must be established, with technical or specific terms and stimulate the reasoning and discussion of that audience . On the other hand, when the goal is to attract a more immature audience academically, a simpler text should be structured, with details that cover factors that make up the full understanding of this audience.
Answer: 1. so shows a snowy dove trooping with crows.
Explanation: Alliteration is a literary device that consists in the repetition of the first syllable of consecutive words, or words that are close to each other. Alliteration is often used to create rhythm, symmetry or to make the text more effective. In the given excerpt from act I from "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare, we can see an example of alliteration in the phrase "so shows a snowy dove trooping with crows."
Answer: D) Do you recognize ideas you've run across in other sources
or A but I say D
Explanation: because D is like you have already read over and spotted something interesting, but A seems accurate too.
<span>Sprang means to move or jump, rapidly upward and forward (verb)
Strand means land, mostly a beach, boarding a body of water. (Noun)</span>
Situational irony occurs when incongruity appears between expectations of something to happen, and what actually happens instead. From the choices above, I think the correct answer from the choices listed is option D, Ram is trying to be friendly in spite of hostile treatment.