Answer:
A limerick consists of five lines written in one stanza whereby the first, second and fifth lines end in rhyming words while the third and fourth lines must rhyme. A limerick's rhythm is anapestic; two unstressed syllables are followed by a third stressed syllable.
Explanation:
Charming Lass.
There was a young girl on a tower,
Who looked just as fresh as a flower,
Her hair was like silk,
Her skin as smooth as milk,
But her breath made the strongest knight power.
Unskilled Jill
Once there lived a lass named Jill.
She crossed over the big wide hill.
She did so every day
So her mom could say,
"Yes girl you have some skill."
Answer:
She is grateful that the train ride is relatively short
and will be over quickly.
Explanation:
Answer:
A. When the action or the receiver of the action is more important than the performer of the action.
Explanation:
active: Billy kicked Timmy. (Billy is the focal point of the sentence.)
passive: Timmy was kicked by Billy. (Timmy is now the focal point.)
Answer:
Bradbury´s opening uses the literary device of personification by granting a human trait (the capacity to tremble because of weakness) to a non-living thing (the sign on the wall). This sentence also works as a foreshadowing element, as it sets the mood for something going wrong.
Explanation:
Furthermore, it relates to a later metaphor about time being "a film run backward." In the end, the protagonist finds himself trembling because of his weakness, his incapacity to go through the film of time without causing trouble.
Answer:
I think the answer is all of the above but if it isn't I think it's
C. Determine whether or not they understood the central ideas
Explanation: