Answer:
Yellow: Modifier
Coat: Word being modified
Speak: Word being modified
Loudly: modifier
Best: modifier
Hamburgers: Word being modified
Explanation:
A modifier is a word, phrase, or clause that modifies—that is, gives information about—another word in the same sentence. Essentially similar to an adjective.
1.a
2.?
3.c
4.a
i could me wrong
Answer:
A story has five basic but important elements. These five components are: the characters, the setting, the plot, the conflict, and the resolution. These essential elements keep the story running smoothly and allow the action to develop in a logical way that the reader can follow.
Explanation:
Answer:
The simile there is found in lines 93 and 94:
And <u>as</u> a hare, whom hounds and horns pursue,
Pants to the place from whence at first she flew,
Explanation:
The writer Oliver Goldsmith likens the subject to one who returns exasperated to a location, place from where it once fled in a hurry.
The keywords there are highlighted above. Recall that a simile is a literary device wherein two subjects, two objects or an object and a subject are compared to each other using the word "as".
Similes can also be created using words such as "like", "so", "or" than".
An example of a very simple simile is:
<em>James is as sturdy as a rock.</em>
<em></em>
Cheers
Answer:
I researched Ilya Repin, and he was mostly a Realist. I say this because he painted country folk in common settings, but also painted lots of conflicts between people. He also painted dramatic works, but he still focuses his characters and settings on Realist and less idealized versions of society andthe people in it. He was impactful in society, especially to Russian and Ukrainian culture. Repin is known for the psychological impacts that his paintings made, and he was called a new interpreter of Russian life. One of his most famous paintings was with Ivan the Terrible and his son and was dramatic and sad, but grotesque and realistic. Repin was one of the first Russian artists to become successful in Europe using only Russian themes and people. He was the leader of the new artistic movement in Russian art called critical realism because he chose to paint nature and characteristics of society over the typically studied formalities. He also criticized the typical sugar-coated versions of society and strived to paint Russian individuals in a more honest and spiritual light. He was very politically active in the Bolshevik and Russian Revolutions, and this showed in his paintings. He felt personally accountable for the rough lives of the common