Cows flying through the air among the dusty clouds.
A giant tree connecting the earth and the sky.
The cattle walking down the branches of the fig tree.
The narrator being the granddaughter of a god.
Answer:
In 1966, Cisneros' parents managed to make a down payment on a small red bungalow, thus putting a stop to their often house shifting pattern. This allows the siblings to have a permanent school and not make new friends every time they move into a new location.
Explanation:
Sandra Cisneros is an American writer but with a Latin background. Brought up amidst poverty, and with Mexican immigrant father whose salary barely made ends meet. And along with the Senior Cisneros family still residing in Mexico City, the family had to make annual trips to the South American country.
And after each trip, the family would have to pack and move into a new apartment, a new location, and thus, new schools. This means there is no sense of permanency in their lives, especially the children. This greatly affected their life, especially Sandra who found it hard to make friends and have a feeling of belonging to a particular place.
In<u> 1966, her parents managed to buy their own place, a small red bungalow which provides the family with a bit of permanent location. This ownership of a house of their own meant that she and her brothers will now no longer have to move around and change schools every year</u>.
Answer:
The author of "Talking About Our Troubles," Mark Rutherford, uses the following persuasion techniques on his readers:
1. Pathos: He shares some experiences of people. In this way, he creates a frame of mind for the readers by appealing to their emotions.
2. Logos: He also uses logos by trying to bring the reader to reason and apply logic in deciding when to talk or when not to talk about their troubles.
3. He also uses metaphors to describe situations that are relevant and decisive for the reader to determine when to talk about troubles and fears and when to refrain from discussing them with others.
Explanation:
In his journal titled, "Talking About Our Troubles," Mark Rutherford (1901) cautioned that we should never allow fear to control and undermine us. He also reiterated that it was not advisable to always talk about our fears and troubles. Instead, he advocated that we can render them irrelevant by maintaining silence. That was why he likened people who talk unnecessarily as people who "apply for aid before they have done anything whatever to aid themselves."
Some important events can be listed in this manner in order to show the pattern:
1. Arthur had a vision that he will die. Therefore, he avoids the battle by calling a truce.
2. A Knight wants to kill an adder which is a big snake and that ensues a battle.
3. Arthur tells Sir Bedivere to throw away the sword, Excalibur, into water. But he hides the sword under a tree.
4. Arthur's death and defeat in the battle.
5. Arthur tries to change his destiny by calling a truce, but his destiny chases him anyway.
6. Arthur wants to correct the wrongdoings of Mordred, even it will cost him his life.
7. Excalibur's magic power is in using it for the good purposes instead of evil.