I do not know the story so the answer can't be told
"In" -- not
"terminable" -- able to be ended
Interminable -- not able to be ended
Thus:
Interminable -- seemingly endless
Answer:
Inspiring
Explanation:
It is what you think of her and not what she feels like.
Answer:
From the information in these paragraphs, the conclusion that one might draw about the culture in which this story is set is that Men in this culture are more skeptical than women.
Explanation:
This excerpt shows how the man laughs at the beliefs of the woman since she went to see a fortune teller, fact that the man considered ridiculous, and then he had how once when he was a child he believed in those things too, as his mother had made him believe, so according to the man all women believe in the supernatural and men have overpass that superstition.
In this excerpt from "Song of Myself", the literary device that Whitman uses to address the sea is (C.) apostrophe.
Apostrophe is a literary device that consists in speaking directly to an inanimate object or to someone that cannot answer.<u> In this excerpt from Whitman's poem, the speaker is talking to the sea as if it was real human being capable of understanding the way he feels</u> ("Cushion me soft, rock me in billowy drowse, Dash me with amorous wet, I can repay you"). The use of apostrophe allows the poet to produce a more creative perspective and to develop a dramatic effect.