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wlad13 [49]
4 years ago
10

What text evidence supports Machiavelli’s secondary purpose to inform readers about the tactics Sparta and Rome used to hold cit

ies and their effectiveness? Select three options.
English
1 answer:
Rufina [12.5K]4 years ago
6 0

Answer: The list of cities conquered by Sparta and Rome.

               The description of how Sparta had held Greece.

               The explanation of how Rome dismantled Greek cities.

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Answer: B

Explanation: The authors porpose is to inform the audience.

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How is the nonfictional text similar to the fictional text in The People Could Fly?
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Both tell an inspirational story about an enslaved person becoming free.

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Which revision would most improve this narrative?
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Giving details that describe the setting

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3 years ago
In what place and in what manner might a nonconformist today live?
seraphim [82]

Answer: they live in woodsy or somewhere near the woods, streets etc, doing things differently from what social norms expect of them

Explanation: A nonconformist is any one who refused to conform to social guidelines, orders, or customs either through their behaviors or perceptions. They do not accept the views of others on how things should be.

Example are; street performers, artist, activities etc. Some might even refuse to get a conventional job.

In today's society, there are different type of nonconformist, one would easily find them living in woodsy area or areas that are of close proximity to the woods, streets etc.

They live their lives according to their own personal views.

4 0
4 years ago
What are your thoughts about poetry’s connection to sports? Explain.
ad-work [718]

Answer:

Poets are word athletes, and the poems they make are word performances. Good poems are not static but dynamic—they dramatize the motions of life. For instance, we admire a “good move” in a game or in a poem. Larry Bird suddenly fakes out a defender, leaps in the air and lifts the ball off his fingertips toward the basket — swish. And a poem, near its end, suddenly “turns” and concludes with a powerful flourish. We appreciate both poet and athlete because we have witnessed a moment of grace.

Because poetry is so gestural arid physical, it is difficult to analyze. We can like or dislike a poem long before we “understand” it; this is because our response is only partly a matter of conscious thought. The great poet/scholar A.E. Housman illustrated this truth when he wrote:

Watch children listening to nursery rimes. They don’t listen passively; they listen physically as the lines are chanted. They respond not merely with their minds but with their bodies, and that is exactly the response these body poems are intended to elicit.

A poem is nothing if not physical. Stanley Burnshaw in his book The Seamless Web writes:

But words are also biology. Except for a handful of poets and scholars, nobody has taken time to consider the feeling of verbal sounds in the physical organism. Even today—despite all the public reciting of verse, the recordings, the classroom markings of prosody—the muscular sensation of words is virtually ignored by all but poets who know how much the body is engaged by a poem. (206)

“Poetry in motion” is a cliche often used to describe an athlete performing. The phrase aptly illustrates the fact that sports or any kind of graceful movement can be appropriate subject matter for poetry. In other words, sports have a built-in fluidity and encantatory quality that we naturally associate with poetry, and vice versa. (When I use the word “sports” in “sports poems,” I include, along with the usual definition of “games with rules,” the looser senses such as “an active pastime or recreation” and “to play and frolic.” If a poem works on the basis of some physical action—if that is what it is “about”—then it qualifies as a sports or body poem.)

The mature athlete in motion, like a good poem in motion, is (another cliche) a thing of beauty. We appreciate the lively precision of a dive by Greg Louganis or a vault by Mary Lou Retton. The performance becomes memorable in the same way that a poem’s lines stay with us long after we have heard them read or have read them ourselves. Seeing a perfect dive or vault over and over on instant replay is equivalent to repeating aloud the lines of a great poem.

7 0
3 years ago
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