Most children brought up in brooklyn before the first world war remember thanksgiving day there with a peculiar tenderness. it w
as the day children went around “ragamuffin” or “slamming gates,” wearing costumes topped off by a penny mask. how does smith use language to reveal setting? she uses syntax such as “first world war” and “thanksgiving day.” she uses themes such as “first world war” and “thanksgiving day.” she uses diction such as “first world war” and “thanksgiving day.” she uses diction to structure the words in a way to make them easier to understand.
The correct answer should be she uses themes such as “first world war” and “thanksgiving day.”
This helps build the setting by pointing out to the time period that is being discussed, and then even further zooming in by showing it around thanksgiving.
"Andrew says this because he had been able to keep his promise given to Joe Morgan; he had been able to save Mrs. Morgan as well as his newly born baby after it had been born lifeless. It means Andrew felt contented and jubilant at his own efforts and the achievement."
The similarity between a story and a free verse poem is that they both don't need anything to rhyme in it. Both of them don't consist of meter or musical patterns.