Answer:
Laura Bates offered herself to teach Shakespeare in the maximum security section of a prison in the state of Indiana. What resulted was that the inmates liked the English writer.
Bates decided to share its experience in her book “Shakespeare Saved My Life: Ten Years of Solitary with the Bard. Interviewed by Michael Martin of NRP news, Bates shares the central idea of teaching Shakespeare in a maximum security prison. Bates comments that for many inmates was easy to make sense of some passages of Shakespeare’s works because they had lived something similar or could relate to. Something that scholars found complicated to relate with.
Bates sets the example of “Macbeth”, in which the prisoners related to the story for the inner struggle of the main character and their personal situations. When prisoners got into Macbeth character, that helped them to got inside their own characters.
Answer:
i tried to find some examples of figurative languages in the poem
here are some:
<em />
<em>husha-husha-hush</em> is onomatopoeia
hmm.. <em>slippery sand-paper </em>is alliteration
<em>Moan like an autumn wind high in the lonesome treetops</em> is simile
(and the two below it are also similes. similes compare two things using the word LIKE or AS)
<em>bang-bang & hoo-hoo-hoo-oo </em>is also onomatopoeia
This sentence is a fragment
Answer:
the answer is reason one: The legal driving age should be raised to eighteen for safety reasons
Explanation:the passage states throughout the text that there are very high risk factors for drivers of such a young age. for reference, the first sentence of the passage talks about car crashes being the leading cause of death for 16-year-old drivers in which the passage as well supports this claim by stating the quote "According to the National Highway Safety Administration, the rate of crashes, both fatal and nonfatal, for sixteen-year-old drivers is almost ten times the rate as that of drivers aged thirty to fifty-nine, as calculated per mile driven". the main idea wants us to focus how many are injured or killed because the minimum age for starting drivers is so low rather than having the audience take attention to the financial struggle driving/owning
Answer:
(2) Romeo does not want Juliet to be like Rosaline, who was like the goddess Diana.
Explanation:
<u>An allusion is a passing reference to a thing that is not explicitly or directly expressed</u>. Rather, it is expressed through the use of other means to show or reveal its intended meaning.
In the given monologue from Act II scene ii of the play, Romeo describes his new love Juliet as like the sun who is fairer than the moon<em> "who is already sick and pale with grief"</em>. This comparison is between Juliet, his new love, and Rosaline, his former love. And the<u> lines of the monologue shows his love for Juliet and does not want her to be like Rosaline, who he thinks, was like the goddess Diana. </u>