I think they would react by being sad momentarily but looking at this as a positive, knowing they need to study harder for the next exam, as well as going back over the exam taken to figure out what they got wrong and work to understand those concepts
If an actor is directed to go "stage left", he would move to his left and not to the audiences left.
The answer is B, at least I think.
The definition of explicit is,“to fully and clearly express something, leaving hing, leaving nothing implied.” Something is explicit when it is cleared stated and spelled out and there is no room for confusion, as in the writing of a contract or statute.
So, explicit evidence is information directly stated in the text. The author comes right out and tells you the information.
When they say "The cello has four strings that lie across the bridge piece; it does not have marked frets," they're directly implying the cello is a hard instrument to play.
Hoped I helped you!
Good luck on whatever you're doing!
It is feautrured in Songs of Experience because the poem talks about the experience of a tiger. It is a suspense poem. Indeed, the life of a tiger is full of suspenses. The poem's opening lines are:
<em>Tyger Tyger, burning bright,
</em>
<em>In the forests of the night;
</em>
<em>What immortal hand or eye,
</em>
<em>Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
</em>
The poet praises the the qualities of the tiger by asking questions without answering them. In the remaining lines of the poem, the author continues praising the perfectness of the animal, calling it dark craftsmanship. The thought-provoking point is about the comparison between <em>The Tyger</em> and the previous poem <em>The Lamb </em>which the poet himself doubts that the same God could create innocent spirit like a lamb and such a fierce animal like tiger at the same time. or it could be interpreted as God's different expressions showing his kindness in the face of lamb and his anger in the qualities of tiger.