An epic simile is basically a regular simile, but it takes place over the course of several lines in poetry. There is no evidence in the excerpt provided that the correct answer could be a simile, so we’ll rule that option out.
The phrase starting in medias generally means that it’s a somewhat introduction. It can often introduce the story in the beginning, or be a great start if you want to start your story with a flashback. I’d say this is a good answer for the question, but just in case there’s a better one let’s go over the other options as well.
To invoke the muse would be to get inspiration for whatever it is you’re going to start doing. For example, let’s say you’re writing a story, and you have no ‘muse.’ Here you’d ‘pray to the muse gods’ to give you muse, or in another word, inspiration. This is clearly not the answer because the passage is not invoking any muse. They clearly already know which direction they’re taking with the story.
And finally, the use of epithets would be to specifically describing something and/ or someone. Sure, this passage caries descriptive detail, but that’s not its primary focus.
In conclusion, the correct answer to this question is b ) starting in medias res
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- Marlon Nunez
Answer:
Generalization
Explanation:
assuming a product will work for one person because it worked for another is generalizing.
A miller’s daughter dies in her bed, weakened from lack of food.
Another “poor, hunger-starved beggar boy” is found in the street and carried into a house, where he dies.
A four-year-old local boy dies “for want of food and means,” as does his mother.
You hear the story of a man leaving his home and walking hundreds of miles in search of work or food and returning after a couple of months with sufficient money only to find that his wife and children have all since died.
These four are clear explicit examples of starvation during Elizabethian times, since England faced hard times during Elizabethian times, since the population grew larger by a third, and the resources stayed the same, they had to divide the same products between more people.
Answer:
1. stanza: group of lines in a poem
2. vernacular: common or everyday language
3. trochee: two syllable meter with the accent on the second syllable
4. meter: beat or rhythm of poetry
5. iamb: two syllable meter with the accent on the first syllable
Explanation:
1. stanza: a group of lines in a poem
A stanza is known to be part of a poem, often in two or more lines. It is normally depicted with a separate spacing from other stanza or indented. It may contain metrical lengths and regular rhymes
2. vernacular: common or everyday language.
Vernacular is a local variation of the standard language. It is spoken without following the standard rule of a language. It can be termed as a dialect.
3. trochee: two-syllable meter with the accent on the second syllable
This is a two-syllable foot that starts with a long syllable and is followed by a short syllable.
4. meter: beat or rhythm of poetry
This is considered as the fundamental of a rhythmic structure of a line. It is utilized in a poem. A line of meter contains five iambs in a pattern of long or short syllables.
5. iamb: two-syllable meter with the accent on the first syllable
This contains two syllables which start with a short syllable and them followed by a long syllable.
17 is B(plot)
18 is i think D.
20 is meter
21. is D.
23 idk if this is right but i think it is c
and 24 is author purpose.
i hoped this helped