<span>The details about farming are rooted in the period, while the theme that hard work brings satisfaction can be applied to any period.
</span><span>After reading the excerpt with lines from “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard,” I recognized two aspects that are rooted in the period in which the poem was written, and which would apply to life in any period. Actually I stuck between the last two answers, but I mostly prefer the last one I mentioned in the beginning. This one really makes sense.</span>
The three correct choices are:
a) to provide background information – The prologue is used to help the reader to understand the setting of the story before reading. What time in history did it take place? Where did it take place?
c) to discuss events leading up to what happens in the text – The prologue may be used to tell what happened before the story took place.
d) to offer a perspective on events in the text – The prologue can sometimes focus on a different character or point of view. If the story is in first person, the prologue may be in third person.
Sometimes. If the sentence is two independent clauses then they would need either a period or a semicolon. A comma would be used if you had an independent and dependent clause.
I believe the answer might be to criticise