Answer:
you can use a poem my friend made to help me also one i found online
Explanation:
I'm a full moon, full plate, full platter.
If you break my heart you stabbed and my blood will splatter.
Like the moon and the stars into your eyes I want to gaze.
Sometimes I used to think love was just a game people played...
thought it was fake, till you took my heart and dipped it in a lake.
Dripping with love, with my emotions please never play.
Will you be with me at night to give me light?
Like the moon, for me, please shine.- By My friend
Something i found
By BaileyClark
“Your skin is not paper, don't cut it. Your face is not a mask, don't hide it. Your size is not a book, don't judge it. Your life is not a film, don't end it.”
The writer uses the historical fact that women have been denied the right to vote to convince the reader that the nation has not lived.
The Greek term for "word" is logos. It is the source of the term "logic." Aristotle refers to "reasoned discourse" or "the argument" when he talks about logos. When we try to persuade others of anything using logic rather than trying to appeal to their emotions, we are using logos.
Logos or Logical arguments include things like data, statistics, and common sense. For instance, the writer in this paragraph employs logos, or historical information, to show that by denying women the right to vote, the nation has not lived as they make up half of the population.
Learn more about logos here
brainly.com/question/1960396
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This is a compound sentence because you can break it into two sentences.
Hope this helps
Answer:
Those words depict a scene where the charecters do something prefferabley in the depicted setting. Those 3 words show a very pin point time in the story
Explanation:
!NONE NEEDED!
Looking like a zealous Party member, she wears an (ironic) Anti-Sex sash around her waist, and always participates passionately during the Two Minutes Hate. Julia's other side is much more interesting. ... Winston would sure like it to be the former, and Julia does suggest that her acts are her own small rebellion.
I think that there's definitely some physical attraction. And I think that they were excited by the illicit thrill they got of working against the party together, and that declaring themselves to be in love was another way to foster that rebellion. But honestly I feel like it really all feels more like the kind of teenage romance you get where partners are selected as much out of a desire for rebellion as they are out of any kind of compatibility.
Now, that doesn't mean that they couldn't have really loved each other. It's possible that the limited social (and literal) vocabulary both had just prevented them from demonstrating that their love was on par with that we might see from a pair of mature adults today. But it's enough of a gray area to muddy the analysis. While I personally would argue in favor of the "teenagers enjoying the thrill of sneaking out to have sex behind their parents' back" model, I can definitely see the other side as well. In the end, it's up to you to decide which perspective makes the most sense to you.
https://www.quora.com/How-do-Julia-and-Winston-feel-about-each-other-in-the-novel-1984