The answer is A, or By underlining or italicizing it. Doing so draws eye-coordinated attention and emits a connotation that the word is significant to something more overlying than what is said.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
This option certainly supports nature itself as an intelligent force by attributing knowledge of how to function to the life inside the body described in the passage. The life force is said to exert an influence on the body with certain skill that the excerpt describes as cunning.
Use of words with such a purpose usually refer to motivation and in the context of this passage gives an essential vitality to nature (life) keen enough to make decisiones and influence bodies.
Answer:
"A neighborhood I’ll budge,
A borough, the whole of London,
The expanse of a Sussex estate,
Unfenced Stratford, a portion of Wales,
The highlands of Scotland."
Explanation:
The Taming Of The Shrew-Induction is a poem by Gary Soto which is included in a collection called <em>"You Kiss By Th’ Book" </em>. The author makes use of hyperbole in this poem.
The author uses hyperbole in the quote above to show that he won't budge an inch "...that inch of my lap belongs to thee"
*Hyperbole are statements that are exaggerated and not meant to be taken literally.
Answer:
As this is an opinion, I will say Macbeth
Explanation:
Macbeth proves to be more evil than Lady Macbeth.
1. While she plays a very devious role as inspiring him to commit the deeds of murder, in the final analysis, Macbeth is the one to commit these acts.
2. While Lady Macbeth does display some level of regret, guilt, or remorse about her actions, Macbeth plunges into a deeper moral abyss with his actions and the depravity they represent. Both characters can fit the label of being evil with their actions and thoughts, Lady Macbeth still had the ability of compassion or even empathy that Macbeth did not possess.
The character Childe Harold was a vehicle for Byron's beliefs and ideas, and is a hero version of himself,<span> Byron was able to express his view that "man's greatest tragedy is that he can conceive of a perfection which he cannot attain". </span>