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brilliants [131]
3 years ago
7

Exercise -1

English
1 answer:
Oxana [17]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

1 She learned to play the drum from Mrs. Gupta . <em>(past tense should be used according to the sentence)</em>

2 She makes delicious pizzas. <em>(Simple present should be used according to the sentence)</em>

3 You are supposed to reach the station by now .<em>(Plural verb used according to the sentence)</em>

4 I am planning to go trekking in the mountains. <em>(Singular verb used according to the sentence)</em>

5 Are you going out Today? <em>(Plural verb used according to the sentence)</em>

6 Why have they left? <em>(Plural verb used according to the sentence)</em>

7 A group of trekkers are climbing up the hill .(<em>Plural verb used according to the sentence)</em>

8 Jabin and David are good friends. <em>(Plural verb used according to the sentence)</em>

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Marcy is running for student body president. Which sentence in this excerpt from her campaign speech uses parallel structure? Hi
astra-53 [7]
The answerr is "I also plan to organize more school dances and give my fellow students more opportunities to interact socially." This is because it shows two same level of importance of two different words. It connects two ideas and treats it at the same level.
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What does the storm in Othello Act 2 Scene 1 stands for? <br> detailed.
sashaice [31]

Answer: Storm imagery is deeply significant in Shakespeare – cf King Lear, Macbeth and The Tempest. The storm represents chaos in the macrocosm that presages chaos in the microcosm of Othello’s soul. There was no storm in Cinthio’s tale (probable source).

Explanation:

Real storm – Othello entrusts Desdemona to Iago’s care during the crossing. In a tragic sense, he continues to leave Desdemona in Iago’s hands or at his mercy, throughout the play. Desdemona survives the natural storm, which lets ‘go safely by / the divine Desdemona’ II, i, l.68-73. Iago’s storm, an unnatural one, cannot be seen and will destroy her – it’s something so unnatural and malicious that it’s beyond her ken – she has no hope of surviving it. Shakespeare is aware that naivety and innocence may be attractive and laudable but they are also qualities which, if not tempered with experience and wisdom, will make a character very vulnerable.

The storm creates a frightening and uncertain atmosphere which unsettles the audience and renders us aware of the vulnerability of the characters. Cassio comments, ‘I have lost him on a dangerous sea’ (II,i l.46), prefiguring him losing Othello in a worse storm. He explains, ‘the great contention of the sea and skies / Parted our fellowship’ (II,i l.92-3), prefiguring Iago separating them later.

The elements are threatening: they ‘cast water on the burning bear’ and ‘Quench the guards of the ever fixed pole’ (the guards are two stars in the little bear); vital navigation aids are lost to sight, paralleling the psychological world of Othello: ‘passion having my best judgement collided [darkened] / Assays to lead the way’ II,iii..195-8. This shows that Othello has a degree of self-knowledge (this is his natural state of self-awareness) but suggests his underlying vulnerability to strong emotion and difficulty in governing it – which Iago will pinpoint and exploit.

Othello uses storm imagery on several occasions, referring to himself as a ‘labouring bark’ and Desdemona as the ‘calm’ harbour in the storm of life, a common enough image: women were supposed to create a domestic harbour for their men. When his bloody thoughts are sweeping him along he compares them to the Pontic sea, ‘Whose icy current and compulsive course / Ne’er feels retiring ebb, but keeps due on’ III, iii l.461-2.

The sea imagery continues throughout the play. At the end Othello comments, ‘Here is my journey’s end’, the ‘very sea-mark of my utmost sail’ V,ii l.268-9 ie the storm winds of passion lead to the calm of death cf Antony and Cleopatra. It’s also symptomatic of the fact that his moral world is no longer confused – he recognises evil in Iago and good in Desdemona.

For more see Othello lecture notes here. http://www.english-lecturer.co.uk/resources/Othello.pdf

5 0
4 years ago
I wonder if animals actually understands ppl maybe maybe not
Burka [1]

This question is rather old but I always make up a new answer when I scroll by it >w<

Animals can in fact understand us humans and other animals. They show this by reactin to us with body movements and sounds. I don’t believe that they understand our language, but they understand our tone of voice and behavior. Aka, why we are able to train animals :)

3 0
3 years ago
Imagine that you are a study habit expert. Your friends come to you with questions about how to improve their study habits. COLT
Varvara68 [4.7K]
So, Colton has problems remembering because he crams before the test: he should probably change this habit, and do the "opposite" of cramming: study <span>a little every day.

Actually, studying a little bit every day is shown to give better results that a lot at once, even if the total time is shorter! </span>
8 0
3 years ago
Instructions:Select the correct answer. Which of these analogies is an antonym analogy? crutches are to walk as shoes are to run
bogdanovich [222]
Destroy is to build as arrival is to departure is the antonym analogy :D
3 0
3 years ago
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