Answer:
To be responsible is to be able to do basic things without needing to be told when to do it. Being responsible means taking the initiative to do or complete he task. For young people like me it means maintaing our social identity; it means knowing where our phones are at all times. The point of being responsible to us is also to get good grades, Impress our parents, and pretty soon get the new play station 5 or Xbox series X. Being responsible is different for the younger generation and that's probably because we are held up to higher but weird standards. All in all being responsible is literally being able to maintain your true self in a good way.
I think it's D. It sounds as if something of horror is out behind the screen.
Answer:
To rescue people on the ship
Coast Guard/Navy= Rescuers
Feeling scared but relieved
It causes tension
I know because of the image and the story it tells
Answer:
The structure of the poem "Ode to the West Wind" is complex and poem ends with a rhetorical question.
Explanation:
"Ode to the West Wind" by "Percy Bysshe Shelley" is a sonnet where the poet uses personification. He addresses the wind as a detached character of the power that is unseen behind Nature. The poet tries to make a personal relationship with it.
In the beginning it addresses wild west wind and appreciates its irresistible power and the way it effects on all the things in nature. He mentions that wind changes the clouds in the air, sea waves and even leaves in the forest, in the lines "lift [me] as a wave, a leaf, a cloud".
Shelley calls the cold, wild wind as both destroyer as well as preserver. And he calls the wind of spring as warm which brings a new life.
At the end, Shelley writes a note of hope that though death occurs in winters, it is followed by new life every spring. He wants to make a intimate and symbolic relation with the wild wind as he says in the lines "Make me thy lyre".