Answer:
1. Carrot - We can eat it's root
2. Ginger - We can eat it's stem
3. Onion- We can eat it's root
4. Coriander - We can eat it's leaves
5. Beetroot - We can eat it's root
Answer: D) The alliteration is used to emphasize the simile about the subject's beauty.
Explanation: alliteration is a literary device that consists in the repetition of the beginning sounds of consecutive words, or words that are close to each other. In the given lines from "She Walks in Beauty" by Lord Byron, we can see an example of alliteration in the phrases "cloudless climes" and "starry skies" this phrases are referring to the night, that is being compared with the woman's beauty ("she walks in beauty, like the night"), so we can see that the alliteration is used to emphasize the simile about the subject's beauty.
Answer:
Tiresias tells him that as he refuses to bury Polynices and his punishment of Antigone for the same reason, god will curse people of Thebes. On hearing this, Creon calls him a false prophet and refuse to list to his advice.
Explanation:
In ''The Oedipus Plays'', Tiresias is the blind soothsayer of Thebes. Creon decided that he will listen to Teiresias’s advice as he owes so much to his past advice. Tiresias tells him that as he refuses to bury Polynices and his punishment of Antigone for the same reason, god will curse people of Thebes. On hearing this, Creon calls him a false prophet and refuse to list to his advice.
Answer:
Follow the footsteps of those who won't lead you astray.