The pharse "sword-feast" is a kenning. Option C is correct.
A kenning is a type of circumlocution, in the form of a compound that utilizes figurative language instead of a more concrete single-word noun.
Kenning generally consists of two words, and are often hyphenated.
In other words, a kenning is a concise compound or figurative phrase which replaces a common noun.
Answer:
1. what's hidden in the dark will come to the light
(he tries to cover up the death, but due to his guilt he reveals he commited a m!urder)
2. Underneath perfection hides an imperfection
(he committed the m!urder so perfectly but his own mind messed up the perfect plan leading him to unveil the heart )
Explanation:
The team admired the trophy its had won. - no
The team admired the trophy they had won. - yes
The team admired the trophy he or she had won. - maybe
The team admired the trophy her or his had won. - no
The team admired the trophy their had won. - no
The team admired the trophy it had won. - no
Enjoy!
Answer:
Explanation:
I think this is what a person with a very low self esteem would say. Someone with insecurity issues too. Because why else will one be so bugged about trivial things, going as far as saying they deserve little. I'd give an unsolicited advise the person should stop worrying about public acceptance and just be themselves. There's almost no metric to measure anything when it comes to the things people claim they do or the ones that actually do. The best is to not be bothered by them, and put in your best, I believe the person would come back smiling ultimately
False. A lot of time the more slang you use in a letter, the less intelligent the writer seems.