Metaphors:
<span>provoke the lion that’s dangerous to touch,
</span>the fragile boat: often careless Jupiter
Personifications:
<span>Yet death chases after the soldier who runs,
</span>Virtue, that opens the heavens for those who
Imagery:
<span>Yet death chases after the soldier who runs</span>
and the bloodied earth, on ascending wings.
Tone: Honest and slightly harsh.
Audience: The kids at school learning about war.
Purpose: To show the genuine and harsh truth about war
Answer:
The SOAPS element “subject” refer to the general topic of a text.
Explanation:
SOAPS is an acronym that stands for subject, occasion, audience, purpose, and speaker. It helps readers and writers to organize and identify ideas with ease. Subject refers to What is the work about
. Occasion tells us What is the cause? Audience is to Whom is it directed to. Purpose shows What purpose does it have?
Speaker represents who is telling the story.
Answer:
Connection between Izzy's feelings and fer first quotation is Option 4: "Just like Juliet, Izzy's goals are at odds with her parents' plans".
Explanation:
William's Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" is a doomed story about two young lovers who are from the feuding families. Juliet fell in love with Romeo while her parents Capulet and Lady Capulet wanted her to marry Paris. Thus, they had different plans for Juliet.
For Izzy, this world is stage where she wanted to act. `When she says the lines where she asks her father to be patient and listen to her, the connection between her and her first quotation is that her father also has different plans from him than what she thinks.
Answer: With Mrs. Linde, Nora reveals her insensitivity and lack of shame about the forgery she committed. She implies that Mrs. Linde has obviously aged since they last met 10 years earlier, which accounts for Nora’s inability to recognize her old friend. Although Nora seems sympathetic to Mrs. Linde’s plight, she can’t seem to control herself from boasting about her three children, her husband’s recent promotion, and how good she feels to finally have some money to spend. In a way, she seems to be flaunting her good fortune in front of Mrs. Linde who, deprived of all these benefits, has come to ask Nora for help. It is also through her interactions with Mrs. Linde that we realize something deeper lies under Nora’s seemingly childish exterior. She reveals the secret of her forgery to Mrs. Linde and seems to see herself as quite resourceful for having done it.
In the company of Dr. Rank, Nora is freer than she is with her own husband. She openly laughs with joy at knowing that all the other bank employees will be under her husband’s control. She offers Dr. Rank a macaroon, apparently forgetting that he knows she is forbidden to eat them. She then quickly covers for herself by claiming that Mrs. Linde brought them. Nora seems much more assertive and free with these other characters, as well as unabashedly willing to scheme, lie, and justify her transgressions as altruistic.
Krogstad provides an interesting parallel to Nora. Like Nora, he too is guilty of committing forgery, for which Torvald condemns him and decides to fire him. Although Krogstad is a man and Nora a woman, their crimes of forgery unite them. In fact, Krogstad might represent what Nora would be like if she were a man and were not strictly scrupulous like her husband is. For example, she tells Mrs. Linde that "A barrister's profession is such an uncertain thing, especially if he won't undertake unsavoury cases; and naturally Torvald has never been willing to do that." Perhaps Nora would have delved into the unsavory, given how opposite she is to her husband. Krogstad's is also the only harsh voice of reality that Nora is forced to hear, and that is because he blackmails her for her help regaining his job at the bank. Finally, Torvald’s reaction to Krogstad’s forgery seems to foreshadow his harsh and cold reaction to Nora’s forgery.
Answer:
To essentially provide emphasis where needed :)
Explanation:
Sorry I made a mistake before, but you can copy and paste your question and the answer shows up online for this question!