Greetings,
I am writing to the council regarding the situation that we currently have with the telephone network. I am grateful for the concern of the council by installing a new telecoms tower in order to improve the telephone network,
Despite the installation of the new telecoms tower, the telephone network has not improved but rather worsened. I am not happy about this as it has affected my personal life and business as I cannot make important calls.
I will be glad if this can be quickly addressed in order for the residents to be able to make calls easily and efficiently. I believe that some of the ways that this can be addressed in order to ensure that there is improvement in the telephone network, is to make sure that the right officials come for the installation.
Furthermore, when the new telecoms tower is installed, it should be tested to make sure that there is improvement in the telephone network. I believe that with this in place, there will be improvement.
Thank you.
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Answer:
B, "is situated"
Explanation:
Process of elimination:
A: The Oval Office is in the White House today, so the sentence should not be in the past tense.
C: This is not grammatically correct. The sentence needs a verb of a tense of "to be" like "is" or "was".
D: This is not grammatically correct. The sentence needs a verb of a tense of "to be" like "is" or "was". Also, since the Oval Office is singular, the word would be situates instead of situate anyway.
Answer: The author uses personification in Stanza 4 <u>to point out that the death of Annabel Lee was something he could not prevent from happening.</u>
Explanation:
Personification is a figure of speech in which human traits and characteristics are given to inanimate object.
In <em>Annabel Lee</em>, Poe writes about the death of a beautiful woman. The speaker expresses sadness over her death, describing their deep love. In Stanza 4, the speaker states: <em>“the wind came out of the cloud by night,/ Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee”</em>
By writing that the wind killed his Annabel Lee, the speaker wants to point out that her death was inevitable, and not something he could influence or change. Later in the poem, he states that the angels must have been jealous of their love and thus caused the wind to take Annabel Lee from him.