In "The Landlady" by Roald Dahl, we meet Billy, a boy who stays at a guesthouse in order to escape the cold. Dahl uses poetic devices, such as foreshadowing, throughout the text in order to indicate to us that there is something wrong with the landlady. This is meant to contribute to the suspense of the story.
While at times Billy wonders if something is wrong as well, he fails to realize it at the same time as the reader. The discrepancy between what the reader knows and what the character knows, and the fact that Dahl never states what happens to the character, force us to wonder about the different outcomes the story could have, contributing even more to the suspense of the story.
The reader can conclude that: A) the narrator talks like a small child.
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connect ideas and join run-on sentences
Answer:
hi dont report me we are friends
Explanation:
Answer: B. That the poet has decided to delete verses between the first and second stanza
Explanation: Ellipsis is a mark consisting of three periods or dots, historically with spaces in between, before, and after them ". . . ", but nowadays a single character "..." which is used to indicate that words have been omitted in a text or that they are missing or illegible.
The effect created by the use of ellipsis at the stanza's end is to indicate, therefore that the poet has decided to delete verses between the first and second stanza of the poem.