It is ness cause i had the same answer and i got it
The answer is: structure.
The division of a poem has to do with its structure. It is written in stanzas and lines. The use of rhythm, the lenght, the placement and the grouping of the lines and the stanzas are also important to divide the poem and to express the ideas the writer wants to.
Okay, here’s what I found
Both excerpts are examples of science fiction, and they both describe machines that attack humans. However, the Campbell excerpt is an example of hard sci-fi because the style and narration places emphasis on the functionality and complexity of a certain technology—in this case, a rocket ship. The “Richard” excerpt is an example of social sci-fi since the purpose of the futuristic technology is not simply in its function, but more in its effect on humanity. In the Campbell excerpt, the push of a button brings a machine to life. The function and the structure of the machine is given emphasis. In the “Richard” excerpt, the effect the machines have on people is given emphasis. One of the survivors even speaks about the machine as if it were a person.
Answer:
Isaac Newton changed the world by adding scientific and mathematic knowledge to the world that we still use today. Isaac Newton figured out the principal of gravity and develop the universal law of gravitation. This changed the world because he didn't only establish a law of gravity for one specific place, his law was universal.
<span>Jay Gatsby is intended to be the symbol of the American Dream, he was a poor man who came up from nothing and now owns a mansion on the water to throw the most lavish parties. All this money and material is incomparable and unable to fill the void of his deepest want--Daisy. But people are not included in the American Dream, and F Scott Fitzgerald leaves a person at the center of Gatsby's fixation because she is unobtainable, and those who wish to pursue the American Dream may not get all that they desire. They lose connections on the way to their success and in turn, The Great Gatsby is a commentary on the breakdown of such an American ideology.</span>