Answer: C) “A Modest Proposal” is one of the most brilliant, well-constructed, and effective satires ever written.
Explanation: something subjective is something based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions (it is the antonym of objective). From the given options, the sentence about Swift's "A Modest Proposal" that is written subjectively, is the corresponding to option C: “A Modest Proposal” is one of the most brilliant, well-constructed, and effective satires ever written, because the speaker is based on his opinion.
Answer:
Ethos
Explanation:
Ethos is a Greek word that means, "character".
Ethos is a rhetorical device that tends to appeal to the speaker's or writer's credibility or character.
Ethos gives the audience the impression that the writer or speaker possesses greater experience or knowledge and should, therefore, be believed.
Here, Harriet Tubman does the same thing. She elaborates her experiences to the runaways and tries to convince them through an appeal to credibility.
Answer:
''Polar Opposites'' has two stanzas which have no regular pattern of rhythm. Free verse poetry can include lines that rhyme, but the rhyme will not be consistent or patterned, thus making the poem a free verse poem.
Explanation:
Put this in your own words it will come up copy written, they can see these when they do the plagiarism searches
1.B
2.C
3.C
4.B
5.D
6.B
7.C
8.A
9.C
10.D
11.A
Answer:We don’t use this much nowadays — dictionaries usually tag it as archaic or literary — except in the set phrase make the welkin ring, meaning to make a very loud sound.
What supposedly rings in this situation is the vault of heaven, the bowl of the sky, the firmament. In older cosmology this was thought to be one of a set of real crystal spheres that enclosed the Earth, to which the planets and stars were attached, so it would have been capable of ringing like a bell if you made enough noise.
The word comes from the Old English wolcen, a cloud, related to the Dutch wolk and German Wolke. Very early on, for example in the epic poem Beowulf of about the eighth century AD, the phrase under wolcen meant under the sky or under heaven (the bard used the plural, wolcnum, but it’s the same word). Ever since, it has had a strong literary or poetic connection.
It appears often in Shakespeare and also in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales: “This day in mirth and revel to dispend, / Till on the welkin shone the starres bright”. In 1739, a book with the title Hymns and Sacred Poems introduced one for Christmas written by Charles Wesley that began: “Hark! how all the welkin rings, / Glory to the King of kings”. If that seems a little familiar, it is because 15 years later it reappeared as “Hark! the herald-angels sing / Glory to the new born king”.
Explanation: