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BabaBlast [244]
3 years ago
10

Please Help!! 50 POINTS!!

English
1 answer:
Varvara68 [4.7K]3 years ago
7 0

Explanation:

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Aibileen pays Skeeter a surprise visit.

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What can the Science Museum teach you
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Read 2 more answers
Submit 3 ORIGONAL alliteration poems.
Evgen [1.6K]

1.There is no clutter cluttered up

more closely, I presume,

than the clutter clustered clingingly

in my friend, Betty's room.

Her mother mutters mawkishly

and fills her with such dread.

She mutters on about the muss

that messes Betty's bed.

At bedtime, Betty bounces all

her objects to the floor.

Each morning, when she wakes up, they

go on her bed once more.

There's papers, pencils, potpourri.

It piques her mother's stress.

She pouts. She plies and yet her cries

do not clean Betty's mess.

There's partly broken plastic toys,

each with a missing part,

some worn and withered whistles, which

are close to Betty's heart.

Old ballet shoes she cannot lose,

and photos of her friends,

a burnt-out fuse, some fruity chews,

a box of odds and ends.

Old magazines and school reports

(the ones that got the A's),

her worn out jeans, some socks to sort,

the programs from three plays.

Each object is an artifact,

a personal antique.

She cannot bear to throw them out;

they make her life unique.

There's feathers, fans, and fairy dolls --

and mother-daughter strife.

Her mother lives for neatness, but,

well, mess is Betty's life.

Explanation:

2.If I had a choice, when it's time to get clean

I'd like to jump into our washing machine

for sudsing and soaking and rolling and churning

and bobbing and bubbling and twisting and turning.

Next come my chance to feel just like a flyer

as I get to hop out and spin in the dryer.

I'd roll all around with a fluttering flopping,

just floating and turning with no thought of stopping.

It sounds like such fun, this incredible fling,

that I wouldn't mind if I got static cling.

3.Slithery, slidery, scaly old snake,

surely your body must be a mistake.

Your eyes, mouth and tongue wisely stay on your head.

It seems that your body is all tail instead.

You gobble your dinner, you swallow it whole --

a mouse or a frog or a turtle or mole.

Ugh!

Why don' you eat ice cream or chocolatey cake!

Oh slithery, slidery, scaly old snake.

4 0
3 years ago
Excerpt from "The Birches"
stealth61 [152]
It is option D. personification
3 0
4 years ago
100 POINTS!!!!!! MUST BE AT LEAST 150!!!!!
Alekssandra [29.7K]

Answer:The emotions of a husband who had just lost his wife whom he loved passionately reflects in the poem “Annabel Lee” by Edger Allen poe.

The poet possesses a totally different view about death altogether. Even after losing her wife he feels that though he has lost her by her body, but their soul will ever be separated from each other. He understands that death is inevitable. It will happen to everyone some or the other day. Though in great pain and distress he still finds himself falling for Annabel. The moon, the stars and the world around him make him feel the presence and the beauty of Annabel.

Poe not just succeeds in making the reader feel his emotions but also creates a world in the minds of his readers that love has that potential which can even beat the harshness of death.

The repetition of the words “sea,” “Lee” and “me” not just sets the mood of the poem by giving a form of musical arena but also focuses on the important aspects too. The poet, his beloved wife Annabel and the sea are the three main subject around whom the whole poem evolves. In his deep grief, the poet lays near the sea remembering his wife and finding her beauty in the nature.

Explanation:

5 0
3 years ago
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