Figurative Language is the stylistic technique employed here.
Explanation:
The poem given here is good example of figurative language as there are many events that are directly or indirectly compared to one another and thus bound seamlessly together to make a beautiful image journey through the lines.
The figurative use of the word wardrobe to open a new world for the person and then their use of imagery to describe their new surroundings is one of the rime and the most clear examples here of that happening.
Tired, and possibly dehydrated.
<span>c. object of a preposition
Possessive pronouns are like his/her, ours, whose and etc.
Relative pronouns are pronouns that conjuncts clauses, sentence fragments, or a phrase to a specific noun or pronoun as the subject.
Examples are:
Who
Whom
Which
Whoever
Whichever
Whomever
That
</span>
Super bowl: sunday, february 2
olympics: july 23-august 8
nba finals: june 4-june21
Answer:
The option which the opening paragraph does the least to accomplish is:
B. immediately pull the reader into the action
Explanation:
Let's work this one out through elimination:
A. The opening paragraph DOES establish a relationship between the narrator and a character. We are immediately told they are uncle and nephew.
B. This seems to be the right choice for us. There is not a lot of action going on. We do not know what the uncle is listening for, what to expect, what is going on. This dragging creates some suspense as we wait for the action to start.
C. The opening paragraph DOES provide a sense of setting. As soon as we are told about the "cornfield" and the "breeze", we can imagine the characters are on a farm, out in the open.