While both have to very different meanings, both have a definition of meaning something small (alley - small passage, pony - small horse, pour, or amount of money). Both are 6 letters, but when made plural, are spelling differently (alleys - just add s, ponies - drop the y, add ies). Both are Latin in origin, changing letter to French. But alley is late middle English, with pony being from the mid 17th century.
Answer: 1.The first part was unnecessary and the second part had words that were redundant
2. The extra words were deleted. There were redundancy issues.
Explanation:
1. The first part was unnecessary, since it was transitional phrases. The second part had words that were redundant. For example, you don't need the re in front of duplicate and with the word again. Or office in government with voting,
2. The extra words were deleted. There were redundancy issues. The motto less is more pertains to this sentence.
When he wrote This excerpt he was referring to knowledge, he said that he reads a book a day and that knowledge was his banknote that got him so far,
I believe it's sequential text structure.
Answer:
The term "jungle girl" refers to the girl's personality as somebody who is active.
This term is a<em> metaphor</em> since it describes the<em> African-American girl (Lucille Clifton) </em>in the poem as a<u> "jungle girl</u>" although she is not from the jungle. This simply refers to her "active nature."
Explanation:
Lucille Clifton was an <em>American poet</em> who grew up in an<u><em> African-American life</em></u>. Most of her works, such as the poem "This morning," focuses on her life and family experience. The essence of the poem focuses on <em>how Lucille finally found herself even in the midst of a different society.</em> It also shows her <u>appreciation for her own identity.</u>