Answer:
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Answer:
D. encompassed
Explanation:
This is the excerpt from James Joyce's "Araby".
The word bazaar might also be confusing, so let's just say it's a kind of open market.
So, we have a boy who rushes into that market and finds him self in a hall around which is a gallery with lots of empty, closed stalls.
That can be enough to infer the meaning of the word "girded" which is "surrounded", "encompassed" or "encircled".
Answer:
The author of this proverbial saying isn't known. It is sometimes ascribed to Plato and it does appear in translations of Plato's Republic. Those translations weren't made until much later than the phrase was in common use in English and are more likely to be the work of the translator than being a literal version of Plato's words. The proverb was known in England by the 16th century, although at that point it must have been known to very few as it was then documented in its Latin form rather than in English. Many well-known proverbs appeared first in Latin and were transcribed into English by Erasmus and others, often as training texts for latin scholars.
William Horman, the headmaster of Winchester and Eton, included the Latin form 'Mater artium necessitas' in Vulgaria, a book of aphorisms for the boys of the schools to learn by heart, which he published in 1519.
Explanation: hope any of this helps you <3
Answer:
- Elaborative.
Explanation:
Elaborative rehearsal is illustrated as the memorization method that helps intense thinking to link the information that is already fed, to the long-term memory. It helps to think about the information one wants to memorize by affiliating it to something more productive and boosts long-term memory. In the given situation, Homer is repeating the information and attempting to remember it conveniently by deeply thinking and affiliating it to previous information. Thus, '<u>elaborative rehearsal</u>' is the answer as Homer is trying to transfer the information he gained to the long term memory by affiliating it to previous knowledge and making it more constructive.