I believe the correct answer from the choices listed above is option B. <span>The daily life of the author of "The Wife's Lament" can best be described as lonely. I guess you can already sense the loneliness from the title itself having the word lament. Hope this helps.</span>
Answer:
Yes but there's a mistake.
Mistake: Some where in the middle
It says "Oh hey, my im Osric, we better get started".
You have to fix Oh hey, my im Osric to, "Oh hey, I'm Osric".
But, other things are that this is very creative, it mentions words like, "Vividly, rare, miniature, rigid, desolate and lingered. These are very creative words.
And yes, thanks for that awesome lil' story!
In this statement, opportunity is referred to as a door. The author thus directly refers to opportunity by comparing it to a door. The figure of speech that this statement represents is Metaphor.
- Metaphor is a figure of speech that refers to something by describing it as another thing. In this statement, the author mentions the door of opportunity.
- While opportunity is not literally understood to be a door, symbolically, it makes way for so many things.
- Therefore, the author applies metaphor in this instance.
Learn more here:
brainly.com/question/9418370
D create new social media technology.
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Yes, the Card Criminal Syndicalism Act outlawing the expression of revolutionary political views violate the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights.
Under the Bill of Rights, every United States citizen has the right to freely express with respect, although its opinions criticize the government. Exactly that was the intention of the founding fathers of the United State, that people could have freedom of speech to express their concerns or demand certain changes.
Let's have in mind that during the 1910s and 1920s, different state governments enacted criminal syndicalism laws to prohibit workers support their demands. Many people were arrested during that spam for organizing or participating in protests and demonstrations.