Answer:
<em>Montage is a technique of film editing that combines a series of short shots or clips into one sequence, often set to music. ... Montage sequences often imply the passage of time or multiple simultaneous events, and are a vehicle to present the audience with a lot of information at once.</em>
Explanation:
HOPE IT HELPS
Answer:
The correct answer is option C. Throughout "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" the speaker returns to images of various literary and historical figures.
"The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" is a poem written by author T. S Elliot. The poem was first published in June 1915. Throughout the poem the reader may find several references that the author made to another literary work like "Henry IV" and " Hamlet" by William Shakespeare, certain poems of Andrew Marvell, Dante Alighieri and even The Bible. Eliot wrote "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" between February 1910 and July or August 1911
Explanation:
Answer:
Tolkien mastered Latin and Greek. Then in college at oxford he majored in philology; the study of languages.
Explanation:
J.R.R Tolkien loved languages, his mother Mable Tolkien paid for his tuition to attend king Edward school in Birmingham, England when they returned to England from South Africa. Tolkien had great interest in languages, He mastered Latin and Greek and was also developing his own language.
After his mother Mabel passed away October 15, 1904, life was hard on Tolkien and his brother. The father Francis Morgan became their guardian.
Tolkien looked towards college, then was first rejected at oxford but was later accepted, where he majored in philology;the study of languages. At oxford, he read classic literature, Gothic, old English, welsh and Finnish.
Tolkien proposed to Edith in 1916 while still studying in oxford. he soon received his first class degree in philology.
Answer:
the vowel that joins a root to another root or to a suffix
Explanation:
My/o as in Myology employs a combining vowel, in this case, the 'o', which serves as a merger for two root words or a root word and a suffix. Known to have no distinct meaning, this vowel eases the pronunciation of certain medical terms that are otherwise difficult to pronounce.
Another example is cardiology, which is the study of the heart and diseases associated with it. Cardia is a root word in Greek which means 'heart', and logy is another root wordy in Greek which refers to the 'study of'. It is widely used for this purpose and is seconded by the combining vowel 'a'.
<span>1. Determined. best describes the mood.
2. Has informed.</span>