In "Auspex," the phrase “dead leaves and snow” at the end of the first stanza implies that the speaker is experiencing an absence of love or passion.
The author compares his heart to a nest that once had birds in it. In this nest, when the last bird leaves, it remains only with "dead leaves and snow", and not with life and warmth that those birds (or feelings) had.
"<span>a. The players' uniforms were black and gold." is the only sentence from the list that does not contain any errors since in this case "players" is plural. </span>
The answer to the question above is "over-regularization" which is the term for the sentence shown on the question above<span>. An over-regularization describes a child's tendency to make up their own related word. This is a part of their language-learning. The sentence has "catched" word as its verb which is false according to the grammatical rule.</span>
It is written in response to a death, and <span>It was a form of ancient Greek poetry.</span>