By providing a different perspective and encouraging the Englishman to never give up, the boy helps him to discover the alchemist.
Answer:
I beleive the meaning of this phrase is the expreiencing somethng is like a new teacher teaching you something new
Explanation:
I hope this helps.
Answer:
The narrator in Blake's "The Tyger" expresses:
D. disturbed awe.
Explanation:
The speaker in William Blake's poem "The Tyger" is in awe of the tiger. He fears and admires the tiger at the same time. The animal's aura is filled with terror and wonder. It was made to kill. Its pace, it gaze, all of it shows how terrible it is. Yet, it was created by God, just like the innocent and harmless lamb. That is what disturbs the speaker the most. How can the same creator come up with such different creatures? One that is a natural murderer, and one that is completely meek? Having that in mind, we can say the narrator in the poem expresses D. disturbed awe.
Answer:
able to be observed
Explanation:
Thus question refers to excrept from Mark Twain's novel "Roughing It".
The word "perceptible" would most effectively be explained as "capable of being perceived" and it originates from Latin word "percipere" which means to understand, to know something with one's senses.
In the paragraph 1, this word is used in a sentence " The snow lay so deep on the ground that there was no sign of a road perceptible...".
That basically means that, because of the snow, the road could not be seen, observed or recognized.
Character vs character
explanation: this is because two people are arguing over a object or someone.