Answer:
yes
Explanation:
Prefix Root Suffix New word
nonconform -ist nonconformist
Suppose that you come across the following sentence in a literature textbook.
Ralph Waldo Emerson led a movement of nonconformist thinkers.
If you did not know the meaning of nonconformist, how could you determine it? An easy and fast
alternative to looking in the dictionary is to break the word into parts and analyze the meaning of each
part. Many words in the English language are made up of word parts called prefixes, roots, and
suffixes. These word parts have specific meanings that, when added together, can help you determine
the meaning of the word as a whole.
Prefix + Root + Suffix=new word
non- + conform + -ist=nonconformist witch means
MEANS: not + go along + one who does something=someone who does not go along with orthers but in other words yes the /answer is:yes
Answer:
to help the reader feel the excitement and unity of the
striking workers
Explanation:
Answer:
The correct answer is option A. It questions the existence of true love.
Explanation:
As we know, modernism is a movement that arises in response to romanticism and puts more emphasis on the role that science and technology have in society.
We have evidence that this poem questions the existence of true love.
We have phrases like:<em> "There is no light"</em> and<em> "spoiling the colors
</em>
<em>of the whole world — you far off there under. "
</em>
Given this information we can say that the correct answer is option A.
1. <span>That company has been making surfboards since the 1960s. - <u>present perfect progressive</u> (present perfect of the verb to be = have/has been + verb + ing)
2. </span><span>Hunter had been playing a video game when his computer crashed. - <u>past perfect progressive</u> (past perfect of the verb to be = had been + verb + ing)
3. </span><span>As of next month, my best friend and I will have known each other for 12 years. - there is a mistake in options here, the correct answer is <u>future perfect</u>, not future perfect progressive (that would be will have knowing). </span>
The direct characters in The Cask of Amontillado are Montresor (the first-person narrator) and the ironically-named Fortunato, his inadvertent enemy. No one else appears in the story, but reference is made to several indirect characters.Luchesi is a man known to both Montresor and Fortunato. He has a reputation as a connoisseur of wine and is therefore a rival to Fortunato in this respect. Fortunato contemptuously dismisses his expertise, but this may be mere bravado. Montresor uses repeated references to Luchesi as a form of reverse psychology to lure Fortunato into the vaultMontresor's disobedient servants are also mentioned. We do not know how many there are, but the fact that he has several makes us question his claim to be a ruined man. He has expressly told them to stay in the house and is cynically certain that this is the way to ensure their departureLady Fortunato is mentioned by her unfortunate husband. She will be waiting, in company, at the palazzo.