Answer:
C. the chaos of a new age's beginning
Explanation:
Yeats describes in the excerpt a vision of chaotic things happening, and the world loosing control, a gyre is an upward spyral that continues to the infinity and usually falcons fly in circles only to fall again into their falconer´s hand, but this one can´t hear the falconer, so he is trapped in that spyral forever, he then sees the centre falling apart, which is a reference to the governments and centralized order, what´s next is just the chaos, of the destruction and the anarchic process of reconstruction.
Answer:
The object that can be both impervious and translucent is Glass
Explanation:
The question is not complete since it does not provide the options to answer it, here are the options:
*Glass
*Cardboard
*Wood
*Steel
The definition of the two adjectives that are asked to define the object are impervious and translucent, this means that the object has to allow light to pass through it but not liquids, taking this in consideration Cardboard, wood and steel lack at least one of the options as none of them is translucent or present any level of transparency.
If the appositive phrase is needed to define the meaning of a noun then <u>don't use a comma</u>, if the appositive phrase defines enough where it can stand by it's self alone then <u>use commas around it.</u>
To be reticent is to not reveal one's thoughts readily. In this case, it is the reticence of the author. The author does not reveal their thoughts readily. If the narrator or author refuses to do something, it is made known that he is doing something. The something here is him refusing. If he acts as if the situation is normal, I'd assume he is acting in such a way that would be nonreactionary of the actions from the provoker. I would safely choose the last option as sorrentino's exercising of authorial reticence.