Answer & Explanation: A habit is a settled or regular tendency or practice, especially one that is hard to give up. It is a regular or constant partner that can either pull you up or drag you down depending on the the habit being a good one or a bad one. Take for instance, having a habit of brushing twice a day (morning and evening) is a great helper as is a practice of good hygiene whereas a heroin habit is a drug abuse which can eventually be a huge burden as a result of the cost/ health implication.
Answer:
Yeah ill be crying and itching and burning and ill try to run away or tell my parents NO
Answer:
If your options are:
A. The poem uses variations of meter to affect rhyme.
B. The poem’s sentences flow across stanzas.
C. The poem’s stanzas have varying lengths.
D. The poem uses nontraditional syntax and rhyme scheme.
Then the answer is D.
Explanation:
The nontraditional syntax is best shown in the use of enjambment - interrupting the thought and syntactic structure in the middle and moving the rest to the next line. For example: "and older than the // flow of human blood (...)"
Here, the definite article "the" has been separated from the noun "flow", which means the phrase is visually broken in half.
- A isn't true because this poem conveys its meaning through rhythm and not rhyme. There are virtually no rhymes here and the syntax (sentence structure) is disrupted, invoking the sound of a river flowing in irregular but consistent waves.
- B isn't true because the sentences do flow across lines but not across stanzas.
- The stanzas do have varying lengths. But even though this element was pretty rare prior to the 20th century, it is not exclusive to modernist poetry. That's why C isn't true either.