Hemingway's story "In Another Country" was influenced by his experiences D) as an ambulance driver in World War I.
"In Another Country" is a story written by Ernest Hemingway in 1927 about a story of a man's live named Nick Adams in the wartime<span>. He made Nick Adams as a character in the story that represents himself based on his experience.</span>
Answer:
use evidence from credible sources. For example, I am taking about cyber bullying, to create ethos, would us US Government statistics on cyber bullying so that my audience will believe me because US Government statistics is a reliable source.
Explanation:
This question is missing the excerpt. I've found it online. It is as follows:
Read the passage from Sugar Changed the World. In Brazil, when word came that the harvest was about to begin, a priest came to bless the mill—and the workers. The blessing was like the whistle at the start of a race, for now everything sped up. Slaves were given long, sharp machetes, which would be their equipment—but for some also their weapons—until the harvest was done. The cutters worked brutal, seemingly endless shifts during the harvest—for the hungry mills crushed cane from four in the afternoon to ten the next morning, stopping only in the midday heat. Slaves had to make sure there was just enough cane to feed the turning wheels during every one of those eighteen hours.
Answer:
The author's choice of hungry to describe the mills support the claim best:
A. by showing the relentless pace that enslaved people had to keep during the harvest.
Explanation:
The mills functioned for eighteen long hours. It was as if they were hungry, meaning they had to be constantly fed. By conveying that idea, authors show us how brutally the slaves had to work. They were not to rest, because the mills did not rest. They had to keep on feeding cane to the mills, relentlessly, until harvest was over. By saying that the mills were hungry, authors create this monster-like image of a creature whose need is imperative. And the slaves were the ones who were supposed to care for that need in a most unjust and painful manner.
Answer: D) The speaker's paranoia becomes more pronounced.
Explanation:
One of Edgar Allan Poe's greatest poems, "the Raven", is about a narrator which loses his sanity over a strange visit from a raven. The raven can speak, and utters only one word, "nevermore."
The <u>fast pace of the poem</u> suggests that the speaker is getting more and more upset as the story progresses. The rhyme scheme is <u>ABCBBB</u>, which, in combination with the <u>internal rhyme</u> gives this poem<u> a melody</u>. There is a repetition of words such as "nothing more" and "nevermore", which emphasizes the dark atmosphere even more. Moreover, sound "o" is repeated frequently ("Lenore", "nevermore", "floor", etc.) in order to stress the speaker's paranoia. At the beginning of the poem, the speaker is only sad because of his loss and irritated by the presence of a raven. However, as the poem progresses, the speaker gradually becomes paranoid due to the fact that the raven answers each one of his questions with "nevermore."
Answer:
the dog number 4,
I feel sad today. This dog shows exactly how I feel. His head is down on the floor and his eyes have a sad look in them. The picture obviously captures the emotion of sadness.
Explanation: