Answer:
The correct answer is - comforts her without asking for things.
Explanation:
This question refers to Emily Dickinson's poem "Hope." In the poem, the poet compares the feeling of hope to a bird. She says:
<em>Hope is the thing with feathers </em>(referring to birds).
She says that hope never dies; it always lives in us, giving us the motivation to keep going, and to fight. She also says that even though hope gives us so much, it never asks for anything in return:
<em>I’ve heard it in the chillest land -
</em>
<em>And on the strangest Sea -
</em>
<em>Yet - never - in Extremity,
</em>
<em>It asked a crumb - of me.</em>
Answer:
D. inclusion.
Explanation:
The narrator puts himself as part of the story. When a narrator describes situations in the story where he puts himself as an observer, this narrator ends up promoting a sense of inclusion. This is because, by observing the scene and describing it, the author is included in the story and becomes part of that narrative as a being that is included in the plot and is observing everything inside the plot.
Before she was born, he was a missionary in India, and that was how she got her name. The Preacher did not call her India Opal though; he called her by her middle name, Opal. Opal and Winn-Dixie walked to the trailer park where she lived.
Answer:
B) Compare the textbook phases to the actual moon phases seen in the night sky each night in 28 day period over a three-month time frame.
Explanation: Sorry if it's wrong