The excerpt that shows the low self-esteem of the
soldiers and their belief that being a soldier has nothing to do with bravery
from Ernest Hemingway's "In Another Country," is the sentence “ The
three with the medals were like hunting-hawks; and I was not a hawk, although I
might seem a hawk to those who had never hunted; they, the three, knew better
and so we drifted apart.”
Think about it, 16 years old? You become a adult when you turn 18. You would also have to be more responsible because 18 is the age you're actions have huge consequences. If you're 16 the worst that could happen is that you get grounded!
Your answer is Direct address...this is why...
<span>direct address is the name of the person (normally) who is being directly spoken to. It is always a proper noun.
A participle phrase </span><span>is a verbal ending in -ing (present) or -ed, -en, -d,
-t, -n, or -ne (past) that functions as an adjective, modifying a noun
or pronoun. A participial phrase consists of a participle plus modifier(s), object(s), and/or complement(s).
</span>
Prepositional phrase a modifying phrase consisting of a preposition and its object.
Indirect address is <span>a address that serves as a reference point instead of the address to the direct location</span>
<span />
The female version of the word "dude".
Answer: In the first eight lines or the first two quatrains of the Sonnet Eighteen Shakespeare compares the beauty of his beloved to the summer and all the natural forces that surround this season like “Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May” and “Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines”, however, in the last quatrain he declares the immortality of the beauty of his beloved in the lines he write, in this poem he/she will be immortal and not ever the death will own it “Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade” and in the couplet declares the longevity of that eternity “ So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,” and “So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.”