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MArishka [77]
3 years ago
12

Make a Personification sentence

English
1 answer:
Neko [114]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

The rain danced on the pavement.

Explanation:

Personification is basically giving human characteristics to inanimate objects. :) Hopefully this helps!

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According to Woolf, which characteristic best described a gifted female writer in the 17th century?
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The answer is "Conflicted" for APEX

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PLEASE HELP ASAP I'LL GIVE 100 POINTS AND BRAINIEST
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Answer:

An author writes a story that uses both characters and events in such a way that the story captures the reader’s attention. The author connects two elements—character and plot. Good stories involve interesting characters, so what’s wrong with the story you just read? Well, it’s true that the story has a character, but he can neither hear nor talk. In fact, he has no thoughts, and for all you know, no motivations or conflicts in his life. In other words, he’s not very interesting. This lesson is about how authors weave their characters and plot to tell interesting stories. Why is this important to the reader? All literary fiction is about human life, stories about what it means to be alive. It is the artful intertwining of character and plot that makes a quality work of literary fiction. Knowing how an author fashions the creative relationship between characters and the events in their lives (plot) allows a deeper appreciation for the author’s craft and provides a clearer insight into his or her message.

Explanation:

pretty sure this is right

4 0
3 years ago
Some people are worried that with machines becoming smarter, we will soon have artificially intelligent machines that can kill p
marysya [2.9K]

Answer:

I could be true due t the fact machines are smarter than some adults ;-;

Explanation:

3 0
3 years ago
In about 100 words, discuss two themes that are shared by both "The Indian Burying Ground" and "The Wild Honeysuckle" and that b
vladimir2022 [97]

AT the very outset of any discussion of the beginnings of American literature we are met by the pertinent query, Is there really an American literature distinct from English? Such a question can be answered only by reminding ourselves what literature is. Here Dean Stanley’s definition is helpful:

          “By literature I mean those great works … that rise above professional or commonplace uses, and take possession of the mind of a whole nation or a whole age.” 1

 1

 With such a definition, for a test it would be absurd to deny that the work of Poe, of Emerson, of Hawthorne, of Lowell, of Whitman, and of other writers of the nineteenth century were contributions to belles-lettres that were distinctively American. Their work unquestionably was the record of the thoughts and feelings of men who are interpreters of American life and who mirror the prevalent tendencies of their time—work that, in Dean Stanley’s phrase, takes possession of the mind of a whole nation. If it be granted that there was, and is, an American, as distinct from an English literature, then its beginnings in the Colonial and Revolutionary periods are of interest and importance.   2

 

Literature of the Colonial Period (1607–1765)

 American literature, in the strictest sense, as comprising only books that are still generally read, is only about one hundred and fifty years old. Including its period of preparation, however, it is more than three hundred years old. The Colonial period extends from 1607, the year of the founding of the Jamestown Colony, to 1765, the year of the Stamp Act, and the first stirring of political revolt. In its beginnings, therefore, it was contemporary with the great accomplishment of the Elizabethan age in England. When Jamestown was settled in 1607, Spenser had been dead only eight years, Shakespeare was doing his greatest work, Raleigh was writing in the Tower his ‘History of the World,’ and Bacon was beginning his ‘Novum Organum.’ The first books written here in America were contemporary with Shakespeare’s plays, the first books printed here were contemporary with Milton’s, and the first authors born here were contemporary with Dryden and Defoe.   3

 Though the great books produced in England were read and admired on this side the water, they did not excite much emulation. Not in America were the great books written. Indeed few books of any kind were produced. The records of the voyages and first settlements, the diaries of the colonists, the sermons of the preachers, are all the Colonial period can show. The colonists were too busy making history to record it, too much occupied in turning a savage wilderness into a civilized country to find leisure for the cultivation of the muses. What little writing was done was in no sense American. Our early writers followed, albeit afar off, the British authors they knew both in theme and method. They looked at life through British spectacles, and failed to produce anything distinctively American.   4

 The two centres of literary activity were, naturally, Virginia and Eastern Massachusetts. To the former belongs the credit of having made the first contribution to Colonial literature. The first American book was Captain John Smith’s ‘A True Relation of such Occurrences and Accidents of Noate as hath hapned in Virginia since the first planting of that Colony.’ This book was printed in England in 1608, and was followed by the ‘General History of Virginia’ in 1624. The latter, which was both written and printed in England is an expanded narration of the same incidents recorded in the ‘True Relation.’ Neither the ‘True Relation’ nor its sequel have added anything to Smith’s reputation for veracity. Indeed he ranks with Defoe as one of the most picturesque and entertaining liars in all our literary annals. What he attempted, and succeeded admirably in doing, was to furnish a vivid and, therefore, interesting romance of life in Colonial Virginia. He wrote to satisfy the craving for excitement on the part of the gullible British public, ready to credit anything, even the preposterous Pocahontas story, provided it were localized in the land Michael Drayton (in his poem ‘Virginia’) had affirmed to be “Earth’s only paradise.”

3 0
3 years ago
Read the excerpt from "poetry." i, too, dislike it: there are things that are important beyond all this fiddle. reading it, howe
-BARSIC- [3]
Hey there!

The answer is likely something the lines of disrespect, scorn, or disdain. This line basically means that even if someone doesn't like poetry, they'll still find it to be a medium of <span>genuineness for the writer to express their feelings through</span>. In context, you could replace the word "contempt" with these synonyms and have the line still retain the same meaning. 

<span>"...Reading it, however, with a perfect" disdain "for it, one discovers in it after all, a place for the genuine."

</span>Hope this helped you out! :-)
3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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