The handle is possibly what you mean....
Probably a little too late, but "Brenton's poem includes the expected comparisons to the beauty of his wife's hair and mouth, but he goes beyond praising mere physical beauty to create a comparison about her thoughts. Brenton's poem reveals a modern outlook with his inclusion of less expected parts: her eyelashes, brows, and waist. Both Shakespeare and Spenser stick to the usual body parts: hair, eyes, cheeks, and breast. All express their love, but Shakespeare portrays his loved one as a "real" woman, not a perfect woman. Brenton's wife seems more real than Spenser's, who is idealized the most with rich comparisons like gold, rubies, and pearls. Brenton's poem also uses more modern and unexpected comparison: "the waist of an otter," "teeth like the tracks of white mice on the white earth," "shoulders of champagne." His images are more vivid because they are less familiar.
C a week and my answer has to be 20 characters long so here
<span>In short - from broadest to narrowest:
</span>1. The use of glass and steel in modernist architecture.<span>
2. The use of glass and steel by architect I.M. Pei
3. Architect I.M. Pei's contributions to the Glass Pyramid at the Louvre.
In detail:
Whenever you are trying to order something from broadest to narrowest you have to look at what information is being provided to you.
Think of this concept of taking a picture.
When you take a picture of something from a distance, you can get a broad range of objects in the picture before you zoom in.
If you focus or zoom in on a specific object, your scope becomes narrower and you see something more closely.
If you zoom further, you may be able to see some detailed features of the subject in question.
In the example provided, the statements are ordered from the most general statement to the most specific statement. You have the most detail in the narrowest example.</span>