Answer:
1. It's likely to <em>rain </em>this afternoon.
2. I hope you will get used to <em>working</em> in this new condition soon.
3. It's high time they <em>submitted</em> their test papers.
4. My mother is busy <em>doing</em> the laundry.
5. In the event of fire, which way <em>would</em> we <em>take</em> to get out?
6. Jim was the first student
7. I spend an hour <em>practicing</em> <em>playing</em> the piano.
8. <em>Going </em>to Da Lat several times, I decided to travel to Son La.
9. There's no use <em>repairing</em> this laptop.
10. Jim as well as his siblings just <em>came</em> back from the UK.
Explanation:
I am not 100% sure about number 1 and 8 I would need more instructions but I hope that this helps. :D
Answer:
The poetic technique being used by Whitman is:
B. end-stopped lines
Explanation:
As we know, Walt Whitman is considered the father of free verse, which means he is NOT concerned with regular meter, rhythm, or rhymes in his poems. We could easily eliminate options A, C, and D with that knowledge. Still, even if people do not know that fact about Whitman, they could analyze the lines provided:
I see something of God each hour of the twenty-four, and each moment then, In the faces of men and women I see God, and in my own face in the glass. (lines 1281 – 1282)
As the end of each syntactic unit -- which can be a phrase, a clause, or a sentence --, the writer uses punctuation to signal a pause. That is known as end-stopped lines. As we can see in the lines above, Whitman chose to use commas between each unit. That is how he shows the audience there is a pause between them.
<span>the mark of punctuation might indicate that more information is to come a </span><span>colon or a dash.
hope that helps !</span>
B
Sees himself as king over all that he surveys
The answer is C. Juxtaposition. All I did was look up what each answer choice meant.