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hammer [34]
3 years ago
9

You were the river current

English
1 answer:
Lynna [10]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

I think a simile because it is comparing?

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How does meter function in a free verse poem??
Paha777 [63]
It a free verse the meter can change and be however you want it to be. The meter is the beat or rhythm of a poem.
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How do I tell my teacher I didn’t take notes in ten words?
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Answer:I am sorry that taking notes is not important,sorry.

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i honestly don't know

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Read this passage from Through the Looking-Glass.
eduard

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C.

Explanation:

'Through the looking Glass' is a novel written by Lewis Caroll. The novel is another novel is series of 'Alice in Wonderland.'

In chapter six of the novel, when Alice meets Humpty Dumpty who is sitting on the wall.

The trait that Humpty Dumpty shows  in the given passage is impoliteness. In this conversation, Humpty Dumpty is being impolite with Alice. Even when she tries to bid good-bye to Humpty Dumpty cheerfully, he replies in discontented tone.

Therefore, the correct answer is option C.

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2 years ago
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3 years ago
In at least 150 words, explain the tone of the address before the Virginia Congress. Use evidence from the speech to support you
miv72 [106K]

Answer:

Explanation:

Patrick Henry’s “Speech to the Virginia Convention” was so effectively crafted that it ultimately led to the beginning of the Revolutionary War. Though powerful words, pathos, and logos, Henry’s speech was able to instill a vehement, earnest, seductive tone in his audience.

Henry’s speech can easily be classified as earnest because he truly believes the messages he preaches. He fears for the prosperity of his home country as England slowly begins to take control of the American colonies. Henry’s trepidations are what sculpt the earnest fear he has for his country. His feelings are alarming yet at the same time consoling to the citizens. It is important that the people understand the desperate circumstances their country is in, but when stating his concern, he comforts his audience by offering solutions to the dilemma: “We have held the subject up in every light of which it is capable […] If we wish to be free […] we must fight!” (“Speech to the Virginia Convention” 82).

Patrick Henry also conveys a seductive tone by posing rhetorical questions which make the listeners think about what they truly want for their future. His speech is so well worded that he is able to draw the audience in closer and closer with each word he speaks. His seductive tone is critical to the success of his speech because without it, the listeners would be emotionally detached from his argument. Henry entices his audience by proclaiming, “For my own part I consider it as nothing less than a question of freedom or slavery […] It is only in this way that we can hope to arrive at truth, and fulfill the great responsibility which we hold to God and our country” (81).

Although Henry’s speech could be classified as having an earnest, seductive tone, the dominant tone would be best described as vehement. No matter what Henry says, he always proclaims everything with great emphasis and passion. Henry’s tone is evident when he asks the audience, “Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! […] give me liberty or give me death!” (83). When proclaiming those words, it is possible to visualize Henry standing before a crowd screaming for freedom though war. The success of Patrick Henry’s speech is mainly due to the enticing, enthusiastic tone that was conveyed to his listeners.

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