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Valentin [98]
2 years ago
5

Pls helllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllPppppppp me pllllls

English
1 answer:
loris [4]2 years ago
8 0

Answer:

not so sure about 5 and 7 but the rest should be right

Explanation:

1 personificiation

2 rhyme

3 symbolism

4 metaphor

5 rhythm

6 simile

7 cadence

8 imitation of sounds

9 stanza

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From what you have observed, how important is the title of a short story? Explain your answer in three to five sentences includi
Daniel [21]
The cold equations is one of the most famous science fiction short story made by Tom Godwin. I think the other title that could fit in this story is this one, "The unwanted loving cargo" because its all about a girl that is on board on a ship where pilot, Baron would come to a decision in jettisoned the girl in the atmosphere so make the mission successful. helpful
4 0
3 years ago
Read this excerpt from We Beat the Street.
horrorfan [7]

Answer:

A: He still wants to be a doctor at the end of the story, but he no longer believes becoming a doctor is an impossibility.

Explanation:

Hopefully this helps!

3 0
3 years ago
This is all I have. I need help on how Nick feels. I’m confused on that part.
Sladkaya [172]

Answer:

The stopped in the Valley of Ashes on their way to the city to meet Tom's girl, his mistress Myrtle Wilson.

Nick felt he had been ambushed or forced to meet her even though he had expressed no desire to be acquainted with her.

Explanation:

F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" revolves around the story of Jay Gatsby and his desire to reunite with his former girl friend Daisy Buchanan. The story deals with themes of wealth, social life, a lost American Dream, love, life, etc.

The narrator Nick Carraway mentioned how he met Tom Buchanan's mistress in Chapter 2. Tom has been married to Daisy for several years now and his mistress Myrtle is also married to George Wilson. When Tom took Nick to meet Myrtle, it was more of a forced invitation rather than a request. Nick recalls how Tom was <em>"taking hold of [his] elbow literally forced [him] from the car."</em> Nick seems angry about the whole thing, <em>"The supercilious assumption was that on Sunday afternoon I had nothing better to do."</em>

So, Tom and Nick stopped to meet Myrtle Wilson, Tom's mistress. Nick feels that it was more of a forced meet rather than a request to make him acquainted with her.

5 0
2 years ago
Tolstoy uses a third person omniscient point of view in the novella The Death Of Ivan Ilyich. Most of chapter 1 is narrated from
Mars2501 [29]

The Death of Ivan Ilyich uses a third person omniscient narration, so the narrator is able to describe the thoughts, actions, and motives of multiple characters. If the first four chapters of the novella were told from Praskovya Fyodorovna's point of view, her judgment and perspective would have clouded the way we see the thoughts, actions, and motives of the other characters. For example, if the section about Ivan Ilyich's funeral had been told from her perspective, the narration might have been overly focused on her apparent grief. But readers, privy to her internal thoughts, would also realize that she didn’t care much about her husband, in life or in death. She might have centered the narration around Ivan Ilyich's suffering, how even she suffered because of Ivan Ilyich's illness, and how it was better now that he was gone. She would describe the ordeal she went through in the last few days before Ivan Ilyich's death. Given her apparent selfish character, she might well have made it seem like she suffered more than Ivan himself.  

The account of their marriage would also have been different if told from Praskovya Fyodorovna's perspective. She would probably portray Ivan Ilyich as a suitable match for herself. She might focus on the fact that he was a successful magistrate from a good family with good character and fine dancing skills. She would describe their courtship, how she fell in love with him, and their marriage in greater detail. She might tell us how she was really happy to be married to him, at least initially, and describe the first few months of her marriage as beautiful and happy. She’d likely describe how being a mother was hard and demanding, made more difficult by a husband who wasn't supportive. She would describe her outrage when Ivan starts to spend more time with friends, at parties, and at bridge games, apparently to avoid her.

Her perspective about Ivan Ilyich's illness would also be very different from what we actually read in chapter 4 of the novella. She'd probably complain about how Ivan was trying to get attention by fussing about some trivial health problem. She'd feel that his illness was his fault because he wouldn’t follow the doctor's instructions and would eat and drink all the wrong things, while she had to bear the consequences of his "illness."

Some details from the first four chapters would also be missing if the story were told from Praskovya Fyodorovna's point of view. For example, we wouldn’t have known of Ivan Ilyich's colleagues' thoughts about and reactions to his death. Praskovya wasn't part of this discussion, and she obviously couldn’t read their minds. She wouldn't have been able to write about Peter Ivanovich's fears and thoughts about death. The details of Ivan Ilyich's early life would also vary depending on her knowledge of Ivan Ilyich's family and his childhood. She wouldn't have been able to describe what Ivan was going through after their marriage and the birth of their children because he wasn't sharing his thoughts and feelings with her. And lastly, she was probably clueless about Ivan Ilyich's health concerns and his fear of death because they didn't talk much about it.

8 0
3 years ago
Dismal: With the field torn up by the players' cleats, and the cold rain falling in waves, conditions on the playing field were
Naya [18.7K]

Hi. From the context of your question, I believe you want to know the meaning of the word "dismal." So, I hope the answer below will help you.

Answer:

"Dismal" means rainy, dark, gloomy.

Explanation:

The word "dismal" releases the feeling that something unfavorable is happening. That's because, this word means that something is dark, downcast, dark and harmful. When this word is applied to the phrase presented in the question above, we can see that it refers to an unfavorable weather condition for playing soccer on the field. In this case, we can consider the word "dismal" to mean "rainy," "cold" and "dark."

8 0
3 years ago
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