Answer:
Repetition in "the raven" gives the sensation of dark and dreary mood, the word "nevermore" is repeated at the end or nearly every stanza.
Repetition of consonant sounds is here: "and the silken sad uncertain rustling of each purple curtain". This consonance let people know what Poe was thinking when he wrote the text.
Point of view is the despair of the man and the echo of his sadness throughout the whole poem.
The selection that contains a fragment is B.
Every other sentence contains two distinct clauses put together by the use of a relative pronoun (which in A and C) or a conjunction (so in phrase D). In B, the two clauses "she doesn't give herself enough credit" and "that's too bad" are not linked syntactically and are simply juxtaposed.
Although not grammatically "correct", the use of a fragmented syntax a frequent trait of oral speech.
The speaker asks God to be violent in order to be made new
Nick, owl eyes a few servants and Gatsby's father attended his funeral. This is significant because everybody "loved" him when he was alive but when he died nobody really cared. He never really had friends or people that truly loved him, just people who loved the mystery he held and fancy parties he threw.
After reading the passages about Earhart and Blackwell, we can say both describe the first women to do something that people thought only men could do.
<h3>What are the passages about?</h3>
The first passage is about how Amelia Earhart was the first woman to accomplish something people used to think only men were able to do. She was the first woman to fly across two oceans.
The second passage is about how Elizabeth Blackwell was also the first woman to do something only men had accomplished until then. She was the first woman in American to get a doctor's license.
With the information above in mind, we can conclude that option A is the correct answer. Both passages describe the first women to do something that people had once thought only men could do.
Learn more about Amelia Earhart here:
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