Answer:
There was this one time where I had somehow gotten behind 1 weeks worth of assignments and a few of them were quizzes and some USA Test preps. I spent (what felt like) about 3 hours on just 1 USA Test prep, there where about 5 of them. After I finally got through those, I got started on the quizzes. A few of them were in my WORST subject: Math. Oh, yay.... T^T I spent basically the day trying to catch up on 1 weeks worth of school work. Not including scalping through some class recordings to find some answers to stuff, oh and having to beg for extra credit.
Explanation:
This is a real story and it makes me cringe thinking about it! Tweak this how ever you need to! I hope you ace the assignment! :D Wishing you luck!
Ozymandias thought so highly of himself that he had this statue built with that inscription to intimidate anyone who might come near it. He meant for it to be a warning to not try and invade or attack, the despair part is meant to be the person despairing because they could never be as great as Ozymandias.
The meaning is twisted though, as the statue crumbles with time showing that all leaders -- especially those who value themselves so highly--will fall.
Answer:
they kept it a secret so they wouldn't know how old they where or when was there birthday because if they knew then they knew then maybe they would want a celebration or a day off work
The lines that have internal rhyme are:-
Line 2:-Through a little roof of glass & Line 4:- For his agony to pass;
The placement of the rhyme within the poetic line is what distinguishes internal rhymes. Internal rhymes are distinguished from end rhymes, which include rhyming words at the ends of lines, by the placement of rhymes in the center of lines.
Middle rhyme is another term used to describe internal rhyme.
Any kind of poetry can have internal rhymes, regardless of whether the poem has a rigid rhyme system or meter.
Poetry may have internal rhyme all throughout a line or only in some lines.
To learn more about internal rhymes here:-
brainly.com/question/7195466?referrer=searchResults
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In the followoing sentence,"Seasons are celebrations. A year's a Ferris wheel. Both honor our world's habit of spinning 'round a star. " In the first line of this poem the poet id using the figurative language called a metaphor because he is making a direct comparison between two things. So your answer would be B, metaphor.
Hope this helps! If you have any other questions or would like further explanation just let me know! :)