Answer: The increased production needed to support the war effort created additional jobs for those who were unemployed.
Explanation: It was on my test and I got it right, so you should too. :)
"Heat", by Hilda Doolittle, is a really short poem with several characteristics. One of them is the amount of imagery that the poet uses to communicate not so much a message but the impressions generated by what is being perceived by the speaker. We do not know who this speaker is, or what the setting is, all we known is that most likely this person is experiencing a really torrid place, most likely the tropics, as this person speaks about fruit that falls from trees. Probably one of the most impressive images this author gives is the one about heat. The poet uses such words as "cut" and "rend open" to let us know one thing; that wherever this person is, the heat is really high. In fact, the image is so strong, that through the hyperbole of heat preventing fruit from falling, you cannot help but think about the thickness of it and you feel as if you were going through a curtain of it. This is why the correct answer is A: It emphasizes how intense and powerful the heat is.
Answer:
The storm clouds from the east had finally rolled onto the ranch. The ominous clouds took it’s place before the sky as the floodwaters of the heavens opened up to release the heavy droplets we know as “rain”. Soon ever blade of grass and every leaf from the tall oak trees were drenched in heavy rain. All the vegetation was struggling to stay up as the overbearing rain drops crushed them down. The night dragged on and with the passing of time brought the booming of thunder. Powerful bursts of Light streamed across the sky in an almost angery sort of way as the winds carried stray leaves and nearby rubbish into the unknown. The storm plowed on until the ranch was completely flooded. The vegetation was ruined and torn apart, the trees had lost many leaves from the powerful wind, and all the animals of the ranch were nowhere to be found. This stormy night had no mercy for the ranch.
hope this helps sorry it took so long to write and think of a good little story! :D
Answer:
1. figurative language
“he allows her in church, as well as state, but a subordinate position, claiming apostolic authority for her exclusion from the ministry”
2. connotative language
”he has monopolized nearly all the profitable employments”
3. technical language
”he closes against her all the avenues to wealth and distinction”