Answer: 1,2,6
Explanation:1.In a field one summers day a grasshopper was hoping about, chirping and singing.
2. An ant passed by working very hard
6.Then the Grasshopper knew; it is best to prepare for the days of need.
<span>Kenings are when you use two or more words to describe objects that could be described with a single word, however, this is more poetic. It was pretty common in the old times, around the 10th century. Evil-doer is a kenning that means villain or baddie. Any type of an antagonist can be often described as an evil-doer, because it sometimes fits your verse or sounds more poetic than just saying villain.</span>
In Shakespeare's Macbeth, the witches show Macbeth an apparition which tells him that he will not be defeated until Birnam Wood marches to Dunsinane. Macbeth, upon hearing this, feels relieved as he understands that it is impossible for the trees in the woods to march from one place to another. However, when Macduff and his army are coming to Dunsinane to fight Macbeth, they cut off branches from trees to hide behind them as they march towards Macbeth's castle. Because the army was hiding behind the branches, it looked like the trees were marching from Birnam to Dunsinane. In this manner, the prophecy was fulfilled.
Answer:
An example of Kenning from Beowulf is 'whale-roadd' used to define the sea.
Explanation:
Kenning is a figurative language usually found in Old English and Old Norse poetry. This figurative language is used by combining two words to describe an object. This figurative language has been used extensively in Beowulf, the oldest surviving text.
<u>One of the example from the text Beowulf is 'whale-road.' The phrase 'whale-road' is combined with two nouns 'whale' and 'road' to describe metamorphically 'the sea.' Addressing the sea to be a road for the whale.</u>
<u>A kenning is combined with two words, that is, a base noun and a determinant.</u>
umm sorry cant help actualy i wanted to but cant