Yes, there is a difference, in most instances where you want to say you have visited somewhere, you say you have been to that place:
"I've been to London."
"I've been to the cinema."
<span>"I've just been to the toilet." </span>
<span>In these cases you are using been as the other past participle of go, and you have to use to as the preposition. </span>
However, if you are using been as the past participle, and want to indicate a state, or for how long you were somewhere, you can use been in.
<span>All the best,</span>
The correct answer would be:
I am the poet of the woman the same as the man
And I say it is as great to be a woman as to be a man
Thorough these lines from "Song of Myself”, Walt Whitman was trying to indicate that, from his perspective, all human beings were equal, irrespective of gender. That is to say, it did not matter if you were a woman or a man, all human beings were equal in the poet’s eyes.
Answer:
He uses the rhythm to imitate the sound of a beating heart. This brings on a sense of eeriness and fear. The rhyme is inconsistent and brings with it a sense of anticipation and constant change, leaving the reader wondering what will come next
Answer:
1 is because it is unrealistic and that all I got
Explanation:
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