Answer:
2) the drummer's sticks were thrown into the crowd after the concert
3) Ellen's eyes are red and itchy from allergies
4) the children's toys were spread all around
5)the teacher collected the student's portfolios so that she could grade them
6)the seamstress' sewing machine broke down
Assuming
that the essay is the epic poem from around 1000 CE focusing on Beowulf in a third
person narrative:
<span>“A
man would roar, "I'll steal their gold and burn their meadhall!"
shaking his sword as if the tip were afire, and a man with eyes like two pins
would say, "Do it now, Cowface! I think you're not even the man your
father was!" The people would laugh. I would back away into the darkness,
furious at my stupid need to spy on them, and I would glide to the next camp of
men, and I'd hear the same.”</span>
With which themes did Roman comedy mainly deal?
The themes that Roman comedy mainly dealt with are:
<em><u>Explanation: </u></em>
<em>Roman comedy mainly dealt with love, misunderstanding, mistaken identity and deception. Roman theatre takes a lot from Greek theater and Alexander the Great disseminated the Greek theatrical tradition throughout the lands he conquered. In Rome however theater related to civic opportunities and theater which was politically and socially charged was much more conservative. The early plays were extremely lewd and mentioned rulers by name but once the play made it to Rome from Athens that kind of stuff didn't go over so well so Roman theatre makes its characters more general and without mentioning specific rulers by name. </em>
Citing a book in print includes author's name(s), title of the book, and publication information.
Its correct format is:
Last, First M. Book.<span> City: Publisher, Year Published. Print.
</span>
So, among the choices:
<span>Harwood, Ronald. Mandela, 1987. Print. New York: New American Library.
Brookes, Edgar Harry. Apartheid. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1968. Print. - CORRECT
Maltz, Leora. Nelson Mandela. San Diego: Greenhaven, 2004. Print. - CORRECT
Tree Shaker: The Story of Nelson Mandela. Keller, Bill. Boston: Kingfisher, 2008. Print.
Evans, Michael. South Africa. New York: Gloucester, 1988. Print. - CORRECT
Smith, David James. New York: Little, Brown, 2010. Young Mandela. Print.</span>
The correct answer for 1 is <span>D) The reader and the speaker share the same essence.
The reader and the speaker and all other people on the planet share the same essence. This is a very transcendentalist thought that we are all connected and are one and the same soul and should not take that lightly. Here ti isn't about physical even though atoms are a physical thing.
The correct answer for 2 is </span><span>D) Loafing is permissible, especially when studying nature.
Loafing didn't have a negative connotation back then, it simply referred to relaxing and dwelling on something, it wasn't just about being lazy. Loafing is permissible and his watching the plants is making him find a deeper meaning in life and in nature.
The correct answer for 3 is </span><span>D) These lines suggest that national identity is forged through having deep ancestral roots in a place.
His national identity of loving America which is also seen in his other poems stems form the idea that his forefathers and their forefathers were born there and they all shared the same experience of the land and nature and it is now his thing. </span>