This is a personal question. I will answer below according to the word that was unfamiliar to me, but feel free to add to the answer in case there were more for you.
Answer and Explanation:
The word that I found unfamiliar and whose meaning I did not know at first was "behest". I had never seen that word before. To understand its meaning, I looked for context clues. <u>The rest of the sentence in which "behest" appears functions as a clue to finding its meaning. It says that, at a person's behest, something happened: "the Exhibition dropped its superfluous rags and stripped itself. . ." As soon as I read this part, it made me think of the word "command." For instance, the sentence "At the general's command, the troops advanced" has a similar connotation to the one with "behest".</u>
To confirm my assumptions, I looked the word up online and found it indeed means "order" or "command".
C.Hubbell uses exclamation points to show the speaker's enthusiasm, while Dickinson uses dashes to create long pauses in the poem.
Answer: D
Explanation: It describes the setting as being quiet and murky leading it to be answer D.
Answer:
B) documented without plagiarism
Explanation:
Plagiarism:
The Oxford Dictionary defines plagiarism as, <em>"</em><em>The practice of taking someone else's work or ideas and passing them off as one's own</em><em>”. </em>Plagiarism is a form of academic dishonesty that entails including or using someone else's words without citing or giving due credit.
The student has paraphrased the text really well, without using the original author's words. The direct quotation is also correctly structured to avoid plagiarism. As a rule, direct quotes are placed in quotation marks, with due credit to the author and quoted verbatim.
False.
This is an example of foreshadowing (indicating a future event to the audience) or even a limited example of dramatic irony (the audience is aware of an event or circumstance that the character is not and watches the character attempt to figure it out for entertainment value)