Answer:
All that year the animals worked like slaves. But they were happy in their work; they grudged no effort or sacrifice, well aware that everything that they did was for the benefit of themselves and those of their kind who would come after them, and not for a pack of idle, thieving human beings.
Explanation:
Hope this helps!
D. According to Dr. Lisa Whey, "moderation is the key to a successful diet" (271).
When using an in-text citation according to MLA standards, you need to include identifying information. If it is a written publication, the author and page number of the quotation are required, if available. In D, the author's name is stated as part of the quote's introduction. When the author is stated as part of the set up, it does not need to be repeated as part of the parenthetical citation. In order to include the page number, it needs to be in parentheses after the quote but BEFORE the period. This way the number is still attached to the quotation rather than floating between sentences.
Answer:
Emphasize the vast emptiness of the scene.
Explanation:
P.B. Shelley' poem "Ozymandias" describes the ruined state of the great king Ozymandias. And despite the king's boastful nature of what he had done, the statue is all alone in the vast desert, with nothing else to show his 'great work' that he'd boasted about.
In the last two lines of the poem, alliteration occurs in <em>"bound and bare"</em> and also in <em>"lone and level sand stretch".</em> These words emphasize how empty the scene is, despite the boastful attitude of the ancient king. The alliteration words only show how lonely and sightless the scene of the statue really is.
Thus, the correct answer is the last/fifth option.
Answer:
O Is a static character.
Explanation:
A static character is one who does not show or undergo any change in their characterization throughout the story. Contrary to the dynamic character that changes or experiences some type of change in the character, a static character remains more or less static/ constant throughout.
In the story "Rip Van Winkle" by Washington Irving, Dame Van Winkle is the wife of the main character Rip Van Winkle. Though there is really no direct characterization of the wife in the story, the narrator mentions her a lot. She is the nagging wife whose constant complains and a barrage of words led to her husband escaping to the woods. And though she may complain, we find no evidence of her ever changed behavior or any change about her really. So, <u>she is a static character</u>.
Answer:
B. The story was told by the tribal elders
Explanation:
The verb is in the past tense, and the subject comes after the action.