Answer:
Throughout the play, Lena struggles to connect with her children, Beneatha and Walter. She's extremely worried about Walter's obsession with money and is totally disapproving of Beneatha's lack of faith in God.
Explanation: TuT
Answer:
The right way to combine the sentences by turning them into a phrase is the following one:
(D)Icy winds, which blow across Antarctica throughout the year, make the continent seem even colder.
Explanation:
If we want a phrase, all we need is a subject and a predicate. Therefore, by adding the relative pronoun "which" referring to the icy winds we form a more concise phrase with a subject (Icy winds,...) and a predicate (...which blow across Antarctica throughout the year, make the continent seem even colder). It is clear that all that appears after the subject refers to it and its acts, that is, it is said in the phrase that icy winds do two things:
1- they blow across Antarctica throughout the year.
2- they make the continent (Antarctica) seem even colder.
When we literally translate terza rima from Italian to English, this means "third rhyme". This was first used by Dante Alighieri, and is composed of an interlocking three line rhyme scheme. Terza rima uses the pattern A-B-A, B-C-B, C-D-C, D-E-D. Hope my answer has come to your help.
Andrew Marvell uses hyperbole as well as the metaphysical conceit in his poem <em>To His Coy Mistress</em>.
A clear example of <u>hyperbole</u>, or exaggeration, are the following lines:
<em> Love you ten years before the flood, (...)"</em>
and
- <em>"(...) An hundred years should go to praise </em>
<em> Thine eyes, and on thy forehead gaze; (...)"</em>
what is exaggerated is the number of years