Answer and Explanation:
When it comes to fairy tales, setting is extremely important to help establish that aura of mystery and magic, a sense that "everything is possible".
Fairy tales usually take place in a far-away land, or in an exotic land, never at a place close to home. That is obviously intentional. What is close to home is not magical, is not mysterious. But a land that is far away, filled with princes and princesses, a land that no one has ever heard of - now that is a place where anything can happen. People can be turned into frogs, witches can curse babies and poison apples, pumpkins can be transformed into carriages, simple people can marry royalty they met a couple of nights ago. None of that would be possible if it weren't for the distant, mysterious land. Time or era is also vague. We tend to associate princes and princesses with older times, but fairy tales will never specify when. That only enhances the feeling of uncertainty, leaving plenty of room for thrilling situations to occur.
Answer:
- Anna is a shy girl.
- She doesn't have much confidence.
- She was really scared when a storm came, but she faced her fears and brought the cows to the farm.
- Anna joined the Air Force when she was older during World War II.
- She and about a thousand other women in the U.S Army, who flew planes, were known as the Woman Airforce Service Pilots.
Explanation:
This should help you with your paragraph.
Brainlist pls!
Answer:
karan has been buying a new bag from thw market
Sports are activities involving physical exertion and skills.
Imagists believed that poems should have "no ideas but in things." In other words, they would described powerful images, and instead of explaining what those images meant, they would let the reader decide what the meaning or value of those images might be.
Imagists were especially fond of inviting the reader to recognize how very different sorts of images can actually be really similar. Ezra Pound famously did this with his short poem "In a Station of the Metro," which associates "faces in the crowd" with "petals on a wet, black bough."
The poem in your question does something very similar by associating the cat's footprints in the snow with the blossoming flowers of a plum tree. The writer wants you to recognize the odd visual similarity of the footprints and the flowers, ideally to show how there's a kind of cosmic connectedness in the world by (because two very different things end up being really similar).
That's why I think your best answer is A.