A. Longing
The detail of the tablecloth having been used for three days as well as the final part of the passage supports that she wishes for better things (dainty dinners, shining silverware, etc.) instead of her own tablecloth that is supposedly the only thing she can use at dinners, therefore, she is <em>longing </em>for better things.
The correct answer is D) it does not use excess words.
<em>One way in which the poem “The Jelly-Fish” by Mariane Moore embodies Ezra Pound’s rules of imaginism is that the poem does not use excess words.
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The imaginist movement uses the image as the basic driving force in a poem. The movement started in the 20th century and among its most important artists are Hilda Doolitle and Ezra Pound. The three rules of Imaginism are: 1) Direct treatment of the thing described; 2) Nlt to use any word that does not contrinute to the presentation; and 3) to compose in sequence with the musical phrase. This is about rhythm. So One way in which the poem “The Jelly-Fish” by Mariane Moore embodies Ezra Pound’s rules of imaginism is that the poem does not use excess words.
The other options of the question were, a) it does not use descriptive words, b) it has an exact meter, and c) it create several images.
B. TOM WON THE RACE.
This is the sentence where race is used as a noun.
A noun is a word that denotes a person, place, or a thing. It answers the questions who and what in that sentence.
In the above sentence, tom and race are both nouns.
Who won the race? TOM
What did Tom win? the race.