Example:
2896 Berry Drive, Hamilton Bay NJ, 89765
FedEx Corporations (Kyle Williams: Principal Manager)
December 26, 2021
Mrs. Anna Hodges
Johnson's Professional Stationary Services
5678 Wiley Street
Hamilton Bay NJ, 89765
Dear Mrs. Hodges,
I would like to re-inform you that your application for the box of card-stock will not be received on time, because of the upcoming holiday. Most of our workers are taking a vacation, and I am sorry to say that your boxes will not be arriving anytime soon.
We will oblige to giving you a discount, and a complementary FedEx key-chain. We also hope that you will use our service sometime soon.
Have a great Christmas, and congrats on getting your new home.
Sincerely,
FedEx Corporations (Kyle Williams: Principal Manager)
<u>Example Order</u>
<em>Sender's Contact Information (Some letters have the phone number and email.)</em>
<em>Date</em>
<em>Receiver's Contact Information</em>
<em>Greetings (It is very professional to greet the Receiver with formal greeting terms.)</em>
<em>Body (Some letters start with a subject, so that the Receiver can understand the what the letter is conveying.)</em>
<em>Closing</em>
<em>Signature (Most people prefer a handwritten signature for formal purposes. It makes the receiver feel like you spent time on the letter.)</em>
Answer:
Madame Sofronie owns the hair shop to which Della sells her hair. She’s described as “large, too white, chilly,” and her manner with Della is brusque and to the point. She wastes no time evaluating Della’s hair and setting a price—twenty dollars. Her manner directly contrasts that of Della and Jim, who value their love and sentiment over material value. For Della, her hair is something special and prized. For Madame Sofronie, her hair is worth the dollar value she can get out of it.
Answer:
Rhetorical question
Explanation:
A rhetorical question is a question someone asks not to receive an answer but to emphasize a point. Rhetorical questions are often used for literary effect or as a tool of persuasion. The question might not have an answer at all (e.g. <em>Why me? Why bother? What's the meaning of life?</em>) or it might have an obvious answer (e.g. <em>Is rain wet? Do pigs fly?</em>). Rhetorical questions can also raise doubt (e.g. <em>Or was it?</em>).
As the word <em>rhetorical</em> implies, these questions are used as a figure of speech.
Answer:
It is indeed hyperbole and not personification. <u>this is because the poet is asking Time to take away all his woes and laying the weight of wings of kindness on it.</u>
Explanation:
<u>Hyperbole is when a simple act is laden with something blown out of proportion</u>. here, the simple passage of time is said by the poet to be responsible for taking away his problems through its kindness, when the time is passing irrespective of his woes and does nothing else but pass.
it would have been personification if the winged feet of time in the quotation given, did not speed because of kindness. <u>the human qualities are laid on time by the poet and are not presented as a foregone conclusio</u>n. hence, it is more accurate to see this as hyperbole.
The answer is a free-verse poem.