Past. You are talking about what already happened
This is from Frankenstein
Explanation:
- The novel is about a series of letters from the explorer Robert Walton to his sister Margaret. It is about his dangerous voyage to the North Pole. In his first letter he tells her about the preparations that were made for their journey.
- In the following letters he tells her that he was isolated and had no one to share his dreams. But informs her that he is confident that he will achieve his dreams.
- He explains how the ship is stuck between two sheets of ice. They find a stranger who is weak and had starved for days. He refuses to board their ship. Walton and the stranger eventually become friends.
Her home should be located at a key entry point to the heart of Maycomb.
Sorry if that does not help,
Usually when a fish floats to the top of the water the fish is deceased, maybe from an imbalance in the PH levels of the water or lack of nutrition, etc. Hope this helps! let me know if i can help any further
Answer:
1. imagery
2. parallelism
Explanation:
Imagery actually entails the use of figurative language to appeal to our physical senses. It creates a visual representation in our minds with use of words. The figurative language uses is used to represent actions, objects and even action.
From No. 1, we discover that the speaker uses words like "hear your voices", "those watching tonight", "huddled around radios" to create a mental picture of what was done.
While parallelism refers to the phrases found in a sentence that uses same grammatical structure.
In No 2, we see the speaker's use of parallelism in:
"This is our time, to our people back to work, and open doors of opportunity for our kids; to restore prosperity and promote the cause of peace; to reclaim the American dream and reaffirm that fundamental truth, that out of many, we are one..."
We see how the grammatical structure was used with "to".
The above answers are correct.
the use of successive verbal constructions in poetry or prose which correspond in grammatical structure, sound, metre, meaning, etc.
Parallelism, also known as parallel structure, is when phrases in a sentence have similar or the same grammatical structure. ... Parallelism also serves to give phrases a pattern and rhythm. For example: That's one step for man, one giant leap for mankind