Grammatically Unconventional
We know, we know – the last time you wrote a "grammatically unconventional" English paper you got a C-. Stephen Crane certainly takes liberty with the conventions of the language, going Yoda on us with sentences like these:
"Doubts and he were struggling" (11.15).
"A sputtering of musketry was always to be heard" (16.1).
"It is true that his trousers felt to him that they were no fit for his legs at all" (3.27).
"A house standing placidly in distant fields had to him an ominous look" (3.28).
Weird, right? This takes some getting used to, but it certainly marks the novel with a stylistic individuality.
A. It is a vivid description that creates a picture or image in a readers mind
A drinking goblet is referred to a glass/metal that are without handle. It's basically a wine-looking drinking tool that were especially used in history.
It basically looks like this:
Explanation:
mass of the body does not changes where as weight of the body chages in respect of temperature and gravity