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qwelly [4]
3 years ago
7

Read the following sentences and add appropriate punctuation marks.

English
1 answer:
nirvana33 [79]3 years ago
3 0

1. Hurrah We have won the match

Ans.- Hurrah! We have won the match.

2. We went to the beach yesterday

Ans.- We went to the beach yesterday.

3. Where have you been all this while

Ans.- Where have you been all this while?

4. A snake bit the man

Ans.- A snake bit the man.

5. This is the best birthday gift I have received

Ans.- This is the best birthday gift, I have recieved.

6. Mother made a delicious cake yesterday

Ans.- Mother made a delicious cake yesterday.

7. You saved my life with my advice

Ans.- You saved my life with my advice.

8. This is exactly the same dress I bought

Ans.- This is exactly the same dress I bought.

9. Watch out

Ans.- Watch out!

10. How clever Im

Ans.- How clever I'm?

11. How kind of you

Ans.- How kind of you?!

12. The boy has been missing since yesterday

Ans.- The boy has been missing since yesterday.

13. Where is john

Ans.- Where is John?

14. I got some chocolates

Ans.- I got some chocolates.

15. I want to celebrate christmas

Ans.- I want to celebrate Christmas.

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Let's imagine a poem as if it were an animal. When animals run, they have considerable flowing rhythms. Also they have bodies. An image is simply a body where psychic energy is free to move around. Psychic energy can't move well in a non-image statement. (180)

Such vague and metaphorical theoretical statements are characteristic of Bly, who seems reluctant to speak about technique in conventional terms. Although the group's poetry is based on the image, nowhere has Bly set down a clear definition of the image or anything resembling a manifesto of technique. And unlike other "upstart" groups writing in the shadow of Pound and Eliot, the deep image poets-including Bly, Louis Simpson, William Stafford, and James Wright-lacked the equivalent of the Black Mountain group's "Projective Verse," or even, as in the Beats' "Howl," a central important poem which critics could use as a common point of reference. This essay, then, attempts to shed some light on the mystery surrounding the deep image aesthetic. It traces the theory and practice of Robert Bly's poetic image through the greater part of his literary career thus far.


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3 years ago
Quotation: "What's in a name? That by which we call a rose, by any other word would smell as sweet? (Act 2 Scene 2)
Virty [35]

Answer:

Juliet is not allowed to associate with Romeo because he is a Montague. If he had any other name it would be fine. She’s complaining that his name is meaningless. If the rose had any other name it would still be the same. So with Romeo; he would still be the same beautiful young man even if he had a different name. “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet” Juliet knows that the blood feud prevents her from loving a Montague. She ponders it. It’s only your name that’s the enemy. You are what you are, even though you may be a Montague. What’s ‘Montague’? It isn’t hand or foot or arm or face or any other part belonging to a man. Oh I wish you had a different name. What is so special about a name? A rose, even if it were called something else, would smell just as sweet. So Romeo would still have all the perfection that he has, even if he were not called Romeo. Romeo, take off your name and in exchange for that whole name, which is not really a part of what you are, you can have all of me.

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Q4: Join the following sentences by using appropriate Coordinating or Subordinating
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1. They rushed to the hospital, but they were too late.
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4. They ate lunch after they had visited the museum.
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In "Sure You Can Ask Me A Personal Question," the speaker thanks the other person for-
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your answer would be A i belive.

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