What sentence? I don’t see anything
Answer:
As I nervously raced down the track I knew that I had to gain on him, I knew in that moment that running past him was the only thing between me and my goals.
Explanation:
First person point of view. The person writes in first person because they say "I" "my" "me"
Answer:
"Admit impediments. Love is not love"
"Or bends with the remover to remove"
Explanation:
Slant rhythm is essentially when a poet uses two words that sound really similar, but they don't not exactly rhyme with each other.
Look for a pair of lines that are like that:
"Admit impediments. Love is not love"
"Or bends with the remover to remove"
Here, we see the words "love" and "remove"; obviously, we know that they don't exactly rhyme, but they are relatively close enough both in sound and spelling. So, this pair is the answer.
Answer:
The book I choose to do is the Weedflower.
Explanation:
The book, Weedflower, is about a 12 year old girl named Sumiko. It takes place before and after Pearl Harbor. Franklin D. Roosevelt signs a bill that allows the army to move all peoples of Japanese ancestry, even if like Sumiko was born in the US. As suspicions grow, Sumiko and her family find themselves being shipped to an internment camp in one of the hottest deserts in the United States. The camp she is moved to is also on a Native American reservation and there she finds that the life she has come to known is now gone. Here, she finds the Native Americans and feels that the Japanese are still unwanted as before they moved here. She meets a young Mohave boy who might just become her first real friend, when he can ever stop being angry about the fact that the internment camp is on his tribe's land. This book tells the truth of how Native Americans and Japanese met through the eyes of a young girl, desperate to fight it, make friends, and find a normal life