D) the embankment
The story begins with the turtle walking over grass, which it does in an unencumbered manner. Even though what is described is a gradual sort of trudging by how the turtle moves itself by slowly “boosting and dragging his shell along,” the turtle trampled through the grass “leaving a beaten trail behind him.” It is when the turtle emerges from the grass and comes to an embankment that there are descriptions of how he is challenged in the climb. However, he was able to overcome this first obstacle.
Explanation:
lose and saggy are very similar things
I want to say it will be first-person. Third-person is an outside voice, someone that is not a character in the plot. It seems as if the narrator is talking about himself, which is why I deduce it to being a first-person point of view.
Answer: This is an example of a Shakespearean sonnet because of:
- the abab, cdcd, efef, gg rhyme scheme
- the widespread use of iambic pentameter
- the use of three quatrains followed by a couplet
Explanation:
In 1609, Shakespeare published 154 sonnets, among which is Sonnet 19. The poem deals with the power of time.
This sonnet is representative of a Shakespearean sonnet because:
- It follows the typical the abab, cdcd, efef, gg rhyme scheme
- the widespread use of iambic pentameter (a rhyme scheme in which each line contains ten syllables -five pairs which are called iambs). For instance, <em>"But I forbid thee one more heinous crime." </em>
- the use of three quatrains followed by a couplet. The first twelve lines in a sonnet are divided into three quatrains (each containing 4 lines), followed by a couplet (two lines written in the same rhyme and meter).
Answer:
A. There is regret in giving up on dreams.
Explanation: