Answer:
'Be going to' has TWO meanings, both of which express future actions.
'Be going to' can be used to make predictions.
Ex. According to the weather report, it <u>is going to</u> be cloudy tomorrow.
'Be going to' is also used to express a prior plan (i.e., a plan made before the moment of speaking.)
Ex. I <u>am going to</u> attend my brother's graduation on Saturday.
Explanation:
<em>It is a shortened form of two words where one is a verb.</em>
As in rough draft? In the rough draft, you need to have a basic outline of your final draft. As in a few sentences in the first paragraph so on and so forth. It doesn't have to be pretty and neat. That's why it's called a rough draft.
Elizabeth, in her poem, describes her feelings when catching the fish. She gives a very detailed description of the fish while showing an imagist style while doing so.
For example, she uses the following phrases:
"its pattern of darker brown
was like wallpaper:
shapes like full-blown roses
stained and lost through age".
She did not use a rhyme scheme to give the poem a musical quality like many poets used to do. Instead, she uses 'alliteration' to create rhythm. Such quality consists of repeating the same sound or letter at the beginning of each or most of the words in a sentence.
"still crimped from the strain and snap".
"still crimped from the strain and snap".