I believe your answer would be B. Smiths
Sorry if I'm wrong, I'm normally not too good with this stuff, but I do do well on it from time-to-time.
Answer: dancing
Explanation: because they are doing it right now, not in the past
Here are the answers with the correct and matched descriptions.
1. prose which uses imagery to create word pictures: <span>D) descriptive prose
</span>2. prose that tells a story: <span>G) narrative prose
3. </span>careful shortening of a reading: <span> F) cutting
</span>4. prose that explains or persuades: <span>B) expository prose
5. </span>physical motions: <span>H) gestures
</span>6. sticking together: I) cohesion
7. clear articulation: <span>A) enunciation
8. </span> looking up at audience regularly: <span>C) eye-contact
9. </span> like fingerprint, unique to its owner: <span>E) voice-print
</span>10. restating a passage in your own words: J) paraphrase
Excerpt: I know that I shall meet my fate Somewhere among the clouds above; Those that I fight I do not hate Those that I guard I do not love;
Answer:The rhyming words "fate" and "hate" connect the pilot's fate to his emotions.
Explanation:
This is an excerpt from "An Irish Airman Foresees His Death" by Irish poet William Butler Yeats and those rhyming words are connecting the pilot's fate.
- The rhyme pattern that we have here is ABAB; fate - hate
Also, in William Yeats artwork we have more rhyme patterns like this(ABAB) and that are the words from 2 and 4 lines. Those are above and love but the words from your question are ones that are referring to pilot's emotions.
His poem is written in 1918 and published in 1919 year.
Other rhyme schemes that we can find in his poem are CDCD, EFEF and GHGH with Iambic tetrameter.
Answer:
I think it's the first one.
Explanation: