Answer:
The literary device used in this sentence is Personification.
Explanation:
It is because personification means to give a non living thing or word an adjective which is only used on human beings. Silence is not a living thing so it cannot invade the room nor can it come out of the night. So in my opinion the answer to this question is Personification.
Shakespeare uses a couple techniques to show the conflict between Hamlet and Gertrude in this scene, irony being the one most used.
First, Hamlet speaks in an aside (meaning no one else can hear him) to indicate he's not interested in speaking to his family -- they are "less than kind."
Then, Gertrude comments on Hamlet's clothing, indicating he's mourning too much. She tells him directly to be kind to Claudius. She says people die all the time, and he replies "aye, it is common," an ironic reply. The death of a king is not "common" -- nor is murder.
Then, Hamlet discusses the meaning of the word "seem," implying that people could fake their grief. (He's implying, perhaps, that Gertrude faked her grief.) His grief, however, IS real.
Answer:
1. The bike crashed into the house. (Fragment)
2. Crazy, pink flamingos flock together at the watering hole. (Fragment
3. (Leave it alone, complete sentence.)
4. (leave it alone, complete sentence.)
5. There are dirty footprints on the ceiling. (Fragment)
I gave a few sentence rewrites if you couldn't come up with any. Feel free to come up with your own if you don't like mine though. :)
B. Recent scientific breakthroughs inspire Frankenstein to study the
nature of life.
Explanation:
Much like the Romantics who were pushed by the recent developments in Science to look for their source of life in nature and spirituality, Frankenstein takes a scientific route to understand life.
T<u>he story is indeed a response to Industrial individualism and Man's will to overpower nature and the pow</u>ers <u>that nature wields over humans. </u>It is a parable to show what happens when humans try to take up the most elemental of the jobs of nature: to give life.