Answer:
2. How well does Sassoon think the war is being run? Provide quotes to help explain your view. Sassoon thinks the war is being run very well.
3. What is Sassoon's attitude towards the war, as shown in this extract? Provide quotes to support your view. YOU HAVE TO TELL ME THE PART WHERE HID ATTITUDE WAS SHOWN. THX
4. How realistic is Sassoon's portrayal of England? Explain your answer. It seems real as in reality, it seem like it would have actually happened.
5. Why is Sassoon thinking of England in this situation?
6. Give three examples of poetic techniques which have been used in this excerpt. Explain their effect on the reader.
7. Based on the evidence in both extracts, what do you think a dug-out is?
Explanation:
you have to put the rest of the story here, I don't know it but if can right the story in the comments i can finish answering it.
The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that: "The narrator’s mother is addressing her sons for their misbehavior." The meaning of the excerpt is that The narrator’s mother is addressing her sons for their misbehavior.<span>
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Answer:
The thought that is implied by the poem's first four lines is: the speaker wishes to live a carefree life.
Explanation:
Let's first take a look at the lines we are analyzing here:
<em>To fling my arms wide</em>
<em>In some place of the sun</em>
<em>To whirl and to dance</em>
<em>Till the white day is done.</em>
There is no way to know if the speaker is male or female, young or old. It could be Hughes himself, but it could also be a child. The description is quite childlike: "to fling my arms wide" is something children are more likely to do. But, imagine an adult, oppressed, hardened by prejudice and struggle, who finally achieves his dreams. To finally be free of worried, of fear, and of injustice. Wouldn't that adult feel like a child again? Carefree and happy?
That is what the four lines above seem to emphasize. The speaker wants a carefree life. He or she wants to play, to dance, to laugh his days away.
'There is some evidence that using mouthwashes does have some clinical benefit in reducing levels of plaque - but only by a bit,' says Professor Damien Walmsley, scientific adviser to the British Dental Association.
They are helpful, they are never going to be a replacement for the mechanical action of a toothbrush for getting teeth and gums clean.'
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Answer:
dishes, trash
Explanation:
they're just messy and time consuming