Here's one that might help.
"He knew he could not stand a chance against Jermaine in a fight," - This shows how maybe in the future in this book, he may or may not lose a fight with Jermaine.
Answer:
El hombre parece viejo.
An answer from a bilingual lol.
"mankind was my business"
The lines in the above excerpt from act V of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet which creates dramatic irony are:
"Death, that hath suck'd the honey of thy breath,
Hath had no power yet upon thy beauty:
Thou art not conquer'd; beauty's ensign yet
Is crimson in thy lips and in thy cheeks,
And death's pale flag is not advanced there."
An example of dramatic irony in Act V, Scene 3 of “Romeo and Juliet” is when Romeo thought Juliet was dead, because of which he poisoned himself, but the audience knew she was alive.
After knowing that Juliet had died Romeo wanted to enter the tomb in which Juliet laid dead desperately. When he discovers Paris he asks him to get away from the tomb, but he didn't leave the tomb. Paris and Romeo indulge themselves in a fight in which Paris is killed by Romeo. He takes Paris into Juliet's tomb and then drinks the poison. When Juliet awakes, she finds Romeo dead after which she too stabs herself with a dagger. This event was an example of Dramatic irony as the audience knew very well that Juliet is feigning her death but Romeo finds it to be the reality.
Answer:
<h3>Annabel have been taken away by the angels but that does not stop the narrator from pursuing his lover for their love was unlike any other.</h3>
Explanation:
In the poem "Annabel Lee" by Edgar Allan Poe, the narrator who is Annabel's lover fight against all odds to keep Annabel in his heart forever. The narrator says that the love between Annabel's and him was so true and pure that even angels were envious of them. The angels took Annabel away from him at such a young age but that did not severe the bond they shared. The narrator says that no angels nor demons could ever separate their souls for the are eternal. Even after the death of his lover, the narrator would be reminded of Annabel whenever the moon beams shine at night or the stars sparkle at night. The narrator says he lays besides Annabel's tomb by the sea every night whom he calls his 'life' and 'bride'.