Answer:
To represent the suffering of the characters, Shakespeare uses the figures of similar language, personification and anaphor to create a figurative language that makes the mourning more intense and poetic.
Explanation:
Shakespeare wishes to reinforce the suffering that the Capulets, Paris and Nurse are feeling when they discover the death of Romeo and Juliet. However, he wants the text to portray this moment in a poetic, subjective and intense way and for this reason he uses figurative language.
We can see this when he uses the simile in the lines "Death lies on her like an untimely frost / Upon the sweetest flower of all the field." Shakeseare also uses Personification, putting death as someone, an enemy who stole Juliet from her family and uses anaphor, repeating the name of death as a way to reinforce her existence. This can be seen in the lines "Death, that hath ta'en her hence to make me wail, / Ties up my tongue, and will not let me speak" and "Death is my son-in-law, Death is my heir. "
Can you post the poem so we can see the pattern
Answer: In the film version, the viewer sees "Charles" sitting on a stool in the corner of the classroom.
Explanation:
There are many different movies with the same name as in your questions so I do not know what is the text and film version that you are thinking of but I have found the answer on the internet that is telling the students that the right answer is considering Charles as one of the characters who is sitting on a stool in the corner of the classroom.
Answer: b) interpret it based on their framework of experience.
Explanation: The one certain thing about the message you sent to the receiver is that <u><em>the receiver will interpret it based on their framework of experience</em></u>. When the receiver gets the message he starts decoding its symbols. He does this by interpreting those symbols according to his framework of experience, making those symbols meaningful for him. Successful communication takes place when the message is correctly interpreted.
Answer:
the sentence is a statement
Explanation: