Answer:
Explanation:
"Fog" by Carl Sandburg has no specific poetic structure. There is no rhyme scheme, and there is no meter. The poem describes how the fog comes over the harbor and into the city, waits, and then continues on. It is an extended metaphor because it compares the fog's movement to that of a cat. This is especially seen when it describes the fog as sitting on "silent haunches" and having "little cat feet".
The lines from "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" most likely influenced Sandburg’s poem is this: - The yellow smoke that rubs its muzzle on the window-panes - Licked its tongue into the corners of the evening, - Lingered upon the pools that stand in drains, The fog in Sandburg’s poem has a parallel representation with the as a cat in the above line from the Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
<h2>
<u><em>PLZ MARK AS BRAINLIEST</em></u></h2>
https://justpaste.it/9mefc
For some reason Brainly detected inappropriate language. There is not.
WATER BOTTLE FLIPS! (This is a very common reason :P) But there is more than one explanation though. By the way, I answered this for fun.
Answer:
Explanation:
I haven't seen those words used since my junior high days. The answer is linking verb.
That animal over there is a Horse. Predicate nominative. (Horse).