Answer: Wrote: Irregular
Borrowed: Regular
Explanation: This is because an irregular word has one word for its past tense and another word for its past participle. They don't just add “-ed.” Where as a regular word would just add “-ed”. For example, walk. Walked is a regular word because it added
“-ed” but if it were the word mice, it is irregular because they didn’t add “-ed”, even though it is in past tense.
Imagery because it’s giving you a visual description
<span>In the last chapter of American Born Chinese, Wei-Chen is revealed to be The Monkey King's son. The answer is letter A. This is because he was heartbroken about Jin being in love with another guy not him and this guy, which has the same blood as he is in love with Jin too. And so from then on, he changed his looks and personality citing that he do not want to be a slave to a human because they are soulless creatures.</span>
What type of figurative language is the use of the word Selma here?
Answer: It is <u>an allusion</u>.
Explanation:
As a figure of speech, an allusion is a brief reference to an event, person, place or idea. This reference does not include a detailed description. In the first stanza of “Monet’s Waterlilies”
, Robert Hayden makes a quick allusion to the civil rights march from Selma, Alabama, which took place in 1965:
<em>"Today as the news from Selma and Saigon</em>
<em>poisons the air like fallout"</em>
How does this example of figurative language affect the last line of the stanza?
Answer: It sets up contrast.
Explanation:
In the last line of the stanza, the author mentions<em> "the serene, great picture" </em>that he loves. This is in direct contrast with the first line of the stanza, where he describes a disturbing event in which people who protested in peace were attacked by police. This picture looks like anything but serene - the word serene means untroubled and peaceful, and serves as a direct contrast to the scene from the first line.
Noun clauses are dependent clauses that can replace any noun in the sentence: subjects, objects, and/or subject complements. In all, there are five different functions that a noun clause can serve: subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, objects of the preposition, and subject complements.J