The poem shows the evil that can come with the
unknown of the supernatural, ultimately leading to the man’s demise, killing
him in the end because of his actions.
I would say the first option. "river knows. I from man conceal". To me says nature knows but he's hiding it from people.
Answer:
He goes to the lake to get a drink of water, and he sees something bright sticking out of the middle of the lake. No, it's not Excalibur. At first he can't figure out what it is, but then he realizes that it's the tail of the plane. The tornado somehow flipped the plane around and raised the tail up in the water.
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
Seven
Don't get caught believing it is goodest. Good is irregular. Much as I like goodest, the answer is best.
Eight
only if you are using earnest as an adjective, can you have earnest in a comparative sense. earnester would be one choice. A better one in my opinion is more earnest.
Sam is more earnest than Albert.
Sam is earnester than Albert.
The spell check underlines earnester. I think it's right to do so. This is an example of tortured language.
Nine
Narrowest.
Ten
nicer.
Sam is nicer than Albert.
Answer:
It's C: Coleridge's sonnet "Work without Hope" differs from the Shakespearean sonnet form in that it contains an unusual rhyme structure.
Explanation: