Answer: Zélie, the protagonist of the novel, is Tzain’s younger sister and Mama and Baba’s daughter. Ever since the Raid, when her mother was violently killed before her eyes, Zélie has lived in a state of perpetual fear and anger. She has trained with the staff so that she can defend herself and her family against attack. Even amidst the unfair taxes that King Saran constantly levies against divîners and their families, Zélie has worked hard to feed her family. Despite these noble intentions, Zélie is also headstrong and short-tempered, especially with guards who threaten or harass her, and this attitude has put her family in danger. Zélie feels as if she is never doing enough to keep her family safe. At the same time, she knows that she is part of a wider cause: the only way to end the oppression of divîners like her is to overthrow the monarchy and put power back in the hands of those who can do magic. Because of this violent past, Zélie is reasonably mistrustful of nobles like Amari and Inan, though Zélie and Amari eventually develop a deep friendship, and Zélie and Inan share a brief romance. Zélie slowly lets her guard down once she sees that other people have good intentions. Zélie is also guided by her love for her mother and the traditions of magic and faith that bind them together. Harnessing the power of all her ancestors, Zélie succeeds in restoring magic in the kingdom.
Fries's Structure of English, language teachers have described English words as falling into two broad types: those that belong in the dictionary like 'storm' and 'confabulate', called content or lexical words, and those that belong in the grammar like 'of' and 'the', called structure, function or grammatical words.
tl;dr: Structural Words are the meaningless little words in a sentence that make it flow or move from one important word to the next.
Answer:
I think it is D.
Explanation:
actively taking notes in class helps you better follow up with what is being taught.
It aides your understanding
It helps you remember the concepts for a much longer time, so you don’t have to start cracking your brain when you want to go back to your notes to revise.
And of course, writing down notes the way you understand it is a great active learning strategy
Answer:
I chose God as an example of Ethos. He is mentioned several times, and usually when someone involves God in their ted talk, people that believe in Him will likely be more persuaded, since they look up to Him -- he is an authority in Christianity. Secondly, for my Logos, or logic part, I chose an overall idea, since there were no specific quotes. The idea of women's rights is a big topic in this speech. The speaker says, "And ain't I a women?" several times. Women being secondary is a real-life problem, and has been persistently for as long as anyone can remember. This speaker seems to be talking about racism to black women specifically. Finally, for Pathos, I chose "I have borne thirteen children and seen most all sold to slavery, and when I cried out with my mother's grief, none but Jesus heard me!" This sentence provokes sad and negative feelings. Thinking about a mother watching her children be taken away from her for to be sold for slavery is just depressing. When she sought reassurance, the only person there for her was Jesus.
I hope this helps
Answer:
B. Unreciprocated love
Note: It is 'love' not 'live' (I guess it was a typo).
Explanation:
These opening lines of Sonet 30 (Amoretti XXX: My Love is like to ice, and I to fire) by Edmund Spenser (1569–1599).
Spenser in these lines uses two metaphors of opposite qualities. He says that by beloved's (Elizabeth Boyle) love is like ice, and my love for her is like ice. What he is not able to understand is that, either his beloved's love (ice) should be melted by fire, or his love fire be quenched by water of ice (when it melts from fire). But nothing happens, it is like stalemate. She does not reciprocate his love, neither is his love (fire) for her put out by her (ice/water). It is a paradox for him to understand.
Elizabeth Boyle in the start did not like Spenser because of his old age, and because of him being a widower. So, the speaker/Edmund Spenser is lamenting this unreciprocated loved from his beloved.
Option A, C and D are not correct because these lines have no metaphor or any other mention to brevity of life, poverty, and physical comfort.