"The best prize I got was my bike"
Answer:
after looking for text clues
Explanation:
after looking for text clues ,he will definitely find other text clues
Answer:
This question lacks context but I will try to answer with what I can. When a poem juxtaposes, it places two different things side by side so you can compare and contrast, giving the poem an interesting effect. The poem might be suggesting that there are many similarities in the two subjects being juxtaposed as well as differences.
Answer:
It is angry.
Explanation:
It could be confused for "Intense." But you generally 'crash' and 'break' things when you are feeling angry.
<em>Disclaimer</em><em>:</em><em> </em>I am not feeling 100% sure about my answer. I accept criticism.
Answer:
Woolf's word choices that suggests that Oliver is preoccupied with how others see him is "looked down"
Below is an excerpt:
<em>"...And from the middle window he </em><em>looked down </em><em>upon the glossy roofs of fashionable cars packed in the narrow straits of Piccadilly."</em>
This suggests that he had a sense of how others see him. The same word choices that revealed that he is preoccupied with how others see him is also seen in line 16 of "The Duchess And The Jeweller":
<em> "...and he would </em><em>look down</em><em> at his legs, so shapely in their perfect trousers; at his boots; at his spats. They were all shapely, shining;..."</em>
Explanation:
The question is culled from "The Duchess And The Jeweller" written by Virginia Woolf.
The short story is centered on a jeweller known as Oliver Bacon who is the only developed character. The story has a reflection of the English society as seen during Woolf's time. The jeweller, Oliver is seen as an ambitious and arrogant man. He became one of the high-ups in the society and lived at Piccadilly, the most expensive place in London.
Adeline Virginia Woolf is the author of "The Duchess And The Jeweller". She is an English writer who is considered to have pioneered and led the use of stream of consciousness as a narrative device.