Explanation:
If something is ironic it's unexpected, often in an amusing way. If you're the world chess champion, it would be pretty ironic if you lost a match to someone who just learned to play yesterday. Ironic is the adjective for the noun irony. In contemporary speech, when we call something ironic, we often mean sarcastic.
Answer:
Explanation:
The weary blues is about power and pain of black art.The poem describes a black blues singer playing in a bar in Harlem late into the night.It talks about how society and racist and how In other words, it honors the beauty of black art while also acknowledging the weight of the pain that led to its creation.This shows how power is used positively we can also say how oppression on the black race results on the negative impact of the poem.
Talk about which side is stronger by using the theme power!!!
The poem thus doesn't follow a set form—like the sonnet. So its not a love poet.Instead, it uses its formal elements to help it imitate a blues song. It has no set meter or rhyme scheme—though many of its lines, including lines 1 and 2 form rhyming couplets which enables the speaker to express his feelings and emotions thoroughly. in free verse with an irregular rhyme scheme, mimicking the natural patterns of speech and music. Plus their is a good use of repetition emphasizing how oppression has effected identity and created fear in their heart.Through the the use of speech identity is shown we can link this to the power and conflict cluster to the poem ChECKING OUT ME HISTORY.
Divide the first one or (8563.3 meters) by 1000 you get 8.5633 kilometers
hope that helps
<span>1) theme is the main idea or the message conveyed through a work. So a synonym for theme is plot message.
2) Each refers to a singular noun. So the following verb and pronoun must also be singular. The correct pronoun to be used in the blank space is his.
3)Possessive case indicates possession whereas nominative case just refers to the name. In the above sentence, the umbrella belongs to someone or someone possesses the umbrella. So both yours and mine are in the possessive case.</span>
<span>This is a phrase by Bernard Shaw, Act 3 of Pygmalion.
He is describing how ill-natured sober men can be, and how their wives make them drunk in order to make them happy and to "make them fit to live with."</span>