Answer: B) The author includes details that appeal to the senses
Explanation: Just had the question and got it right.
Claude debussy was known as
Answer:
french composer
Explanation:
What is a stanza? And how are ways they help the reader understand poems?
A stanza is a series of lines grouped to divide a poem; the structure of a stanza is often (though not always) repeated throughout the poem. Stanzas are separated from other stanzas by line breaks.
above info is from poetry 101
it helps us understand...
Stanzaz separate ideas in a poem. they are kind of like paragraphs
also can u try to answer this
Which historical detail did the authors of BOTH “Moving to America” and “A Fateful Journey” include? A) Tickets cost a great deal of money. B) Some immigrants were from Greece. C) Ship passengers slept in bunk beds. D) Bremen was a large steamship port.
Answer:
Explanation:it is d
The historical detail that the authors of BOTH “Moving to America” and “A Fateful Journey” include option D: Bremen was a large steamship port.
Which historical detail did the authors of BOTH “Moving to America” and “A Fateful Journey” include?The texts represent about the expensive trips and the ships didn't have the resources to keep their travelers more comfortable. Both texts appear the reality of the ships that move the immigrants to America.
Moreover, the immigrants have to spend several months on ships, in a limited space, overcrowded and with little comfort.
Adding to it, food was limited, and immigrants did not know if they would make it to America alive and healthy. The author tries to define the difficulties, or the issues faced by the immigrants who travel through ships. Rest all options like A, B and C are incorrect.
Therefore, correct option is D.
Learn more about “Moving to America”, refer to the link:
https://brainly.com/question/12047724
#SPJ6
Item 8
Read the poem.
Song of the Open Road
by Walt Whitman
Afoot and light-hearted, I take to the open road,
Healthy, free, the world before me,
The long brown path before me, leading wherever I choose.
Henceforth I ask not good-fortune—I myself am good-fortune;
Henceforth I whimper no more, postpone no more, need nothing,
Strong and content, I travel the open road. . . .
From this hour, freedom!
From this hour I ordain myself loos’d of limits and imaginary lines,
Going where I list, my own master, total and absolute,
Listening to others, and considering well what they say,
Pausing, searching, receiving, contemplating,
Gently, but with undeniable will, divesting myself of the holds that would hold me.
I inhale great draughts of space;
The east and the west are mine, and the north and the south are mine.
I am larger, better than I thought;
I did not know I held so much goodness.
All seems beautiful to me;
I can repeat over to men and women, You have done such good to me, I would do the same to you.
I will recruit for myself and you as I go;
I will scatter myself among men and women as I go;
I will toss the new gladness and roughness among them;
Whoever denies me, it shall not trouble me;
Whoever accepts me, he or she shall be blessed, and shall bless me.
Read this line from "Song of the Open Road."
Going where I list, my own master, total and absolute,
What does the phrase "going where I list" mean in the poem?
listing important things in life
going the same way the wind moves
following a set of directions
making a list of places to go
Answer:
Going the same way the wind moves.
Explanation:
"list" can mean to lean, so "Going where I lean" could be interpreted as leaning with the wind, which adds to the tone of freedom in the poem. Also I took the test. I had some difficulty with this question, so I hope this helps.
What does prideful apartheid mean ?
racial segregation
racial segregation specifically: a former policy of segregation and political and economic discrimination against non-European groups in the Republic of South Africa. 2: separation, segregation cultural apartheid gender apartheid.
Hopefully this helps!
What’s the biggest reason to make your offer contingent on a professional home inspection
Answer:
a home inspection is to ensure the home does not have any major deficiencies. It's almost a guarantee that a home inspector will find issues with every home.
Answer:
It could reveal issues you were unaware of
Explanation:
what does ELA stand for?
Answer:
English Language Arts.
Explanation:
Which is an example of paraphrasing the excerpt?
HELP IM BEING TIMED!
(A The immigrants’ next stop after landing in the States was Ellis Island. This was the place where they would be given health exams and other tests to see if they would be allowed to stay. Many feared the tests because they did not want to be sent back to their homeland.
(B “Filing into an enormous inspection hall, the immigrants formed long lines separated by iron railings . . .”
(C One author says, “Before they could be admitted to the United States, immigrants had to pass through Ellis Island, which became the nation’s chief immigrant processing center in 1892. There they would be questioned and examined.”
(D Freedman writes about Ellis Island, “Officials hurried them along, shouting ‘Quick! Run! Hurry!’ in half a dozen languages.”
Answer:
A
Explanation:
Answer: For edgenuity, its A
Explanation:
Write two to three paragraphs to address the prompt. Use specific information from the text to support your statements.
Explain the different viewpoints of Frederick Douglass and Captain Canot regarding slavery. What evidence does each use? How does each present his information?
Review the rubric to ensure you are turning in your best work.
Answer:
Reading multiple texts about a single topic—even if those texts express opposing viewpoints—can help deepen and improve your understanding. For that reason, you will now read an excerpt from Captain Canot, or Twenty Years of an African Slaver.
Before you begin, know that Canot was a slave trader. His views on the institution of slavery and the practice of treating human beings as cargo are repulsive. Likewise, his descriptions of the conditions that enslaved people faced aboard his ship are disturbing. Reading Canot’s work, however, offers us the chance to more fully understand the brutal realities of slavery and to develop a greater appreciation for Frederick Douglass’s efforts to see the institution ended.
Finally, as you read this memoir, remember that different texts—particularly difficult ones—require multiple reading strategies at once. So, make sure you draw upon every strategy in your comprehension toolbox: make predictions, stop and summarize, decode unfamiliar vocabulary, and ask yourself questions to check in on your comprehension. Use the Student Guide to apply reading strategies
Explanation:
(Answer ASAP please!!!)
Sofia paddled the kayak as quickly as she could, not thinking about where she was headed, only that she wanted to get away from her annoying sister. It was the family’s summer vacation, and Sofia had been stuck in the family’s vacation cabin all week with just Jenna to hang out with, far away from her usual activities and distractions.
Sofia stopped paddling for a moment, relaxed her shoulders, and gazed around. She realized she was surrounded by a dense, smoky fog—as thick as soup and as gray as a battleship. She couldn't see the family's cabin behind her or the other side of the lake in front of her. She knew the fog would burn off as the sun rose, and then she would be able to find her way home, but for now she would have to wait. It gave her time to think.
The fog made her feel invisible, which was not a new or unpleasant feeling for her. Being ignored meant she could get lost in thoughts about the barn where she took riding lessons and helped muck out the stalls. Sofia loved the horses' personalities and felt as though she could communicate with them. Her closest friends were the other barn kids who, like her, hung around the horses as often as possible. She planned to be an equine veterinarian someday. Her twin sister, Jenna, on the other hand, seemed obsessed with popularity, which was why their argument had begun.
"The Watsons invited us to go waterskiing with them this morning."
"I'm not really into waterskiing, plus I hate getting water up my nose. I'll probably just read in the gazebo."
"Oh, come on! I don't want to go alone, and you can read about horse anatomy some other time."
"Actually, I'm reading about a famous feline, I mean cat, doctor who invented—"
"You and your animals, Sofia! Can't you stop being such a horse girl and act like a normal seventh grader for a change?"
"Not everyone wants to run around trying to be cool and popular all the time, Jenna!"
The argument had gone on like this for several more rounds before Jenna stomped off down the driveway and Sofia jumped into the kayak and paddled away.
Now the bow of the kayak scraped against the sandy shore, and Sofia realized she was probably on the other side of the lake. After she got out of the kayak and pulled it onto the beach, she sat down on the damp sand and waited for the sun to burn off the fog. She began to regret fighting with her sister. She loved Jenna but getting along was truly challenging. “Identical twins are supposed to have a magical, mysterious bond, so why don't we have that?” she wondered. Sofia looked out at the lake and the clearing fog. In the distance, Jenna and their mother were paddling toward her in the orange canoe.
The twins and their mother sat close together on the little beach. "Listen girls," their mother began, "You're twins but you're also wonderfully unique and strong-minded individuals. Enjoy your differences and support each other because no matter what you do in life, and no matter who your friends are, you will always be sisters."
Sofia turned to Jenna and the girls looked into one another’s eyes. Sofia didn’t see her enemy there, just her sister. Though Jenna was sometimes challenging, she was always someone Sofia loved. Both girls smiled.
In "Coming Through Fog," why does the invitation to go water-skiing create a conflict in the story?
Both sisters want to go water-skiing, but only one knows how to water ski.
Jenna wants Sofia to go, but Sofia already has plans to meet her friends at the barn.
Jenna wants Sofia to go, but Sofia prefers to stay home.
Both sisters want to go, but only one was invited by the Watsons.
Answer:
C: Jenna wants Sofia to go, but Sofia prefers to stay home.
Explanation:
I just know it.
Answer:
C.
3rd answer.
Ending words: stay home
Explanation:
k12 middle school
The broom and the mop ____ in the corner.
Answer:
Um I think it's "Is"
Explanation:
That's how I would say it at least Haha
Answer:
Are
Explanation:
Is would be talking about one thing. ex: the mop is in the corner.
Are is talking about more than one. ex: The broom and the mop are in the corner
When writing, it is important to keep everything in the same verb tense.
Please select the best answer from the choices provided
ОТ
OF
Answer:
T
Explanation:
We don't want to have one time period being described in two different tenses. If you have two or more time periods, start a new clause or a new sentence. Keep your verb tenses in check.
Answer:
ОТ
Explanation:
Which literary element refers to the author's word choice?
a.)diction
b.)setting
c.)sound devices
d.)theme
Answer:
a.) diction
Explanation:
diction is what words the author uses in their work, so this is the correct answer.
setting --> where something takes place
sound devices --> you can find these in poetry or prose (examples: meter and alliteration)
theme --> what a work is about
Answer:
diction
Explanation:
gradpoint
Read about a recent natural disaster, such as a tornado, hurricane, tsunami, flash flood in your region, drought, or mudslide.
Turn the true account into a myth. Explain the natural
disaster as if the reason behind it was a result of improper human behavior.
Answer:
There are many ways to describe the wave of disasters—the hurricanes, wildfires, and droughts—that have swept across North America this summer.
You could call them unprecedented. After all, Irma and Harvey were the first two category four hurricanes to make landfall in the United States in the same year. You might call them harrowing, especially when you consider that more than six million acres of land—a million in Montana alone—have burned during this year's wildfire season. And no one paying attention to the aftermath of hurricanes Maria, Harvey, and Irma would hesitate to call those storms devastating. Puerto Rico's 3.4 million residents have struggled for more than a week with no electricity, and more than half of them still don't have clean water. And, for the first time in more than 300 years, no one is living on the Island of Barbuda; all 94,000 residents have left.
There are many ways to describe this summer’s calamities. But whatever you call these disasters, don't ever call them natural. There’s nothing “natural”—which is to say, nothing inevitable—about a disaster.
Most of what we call natural disasters (tornadoes, droughts, hurricanes) are indeed natural, though human contributions may increase their likelihood or intensity. But they aren't disasters—they're hazards. If a hurricane slams into land where no one lives, it isn't a disaster; it's weather. A disaster is when a natural hazard meets a human population. And often, that intersection is far from natural.
(This is just my opinion)
Explanation:
BRAINLIEST ??
Answer:
The city of Tutaham was a beautiful city before calamity struck. Situated on the extreme coast of North America, Tutaham was an important site with many cultural and religious associations for people. The people in the city led a very luxurious life and never experienced any scarcity. The city was believed to be blessed by the native god. However, the people of the city were totally immersed in enjoying the material life that they enjoyed. Even though they had all kinds of luxuries, the people in Tutaham started to fight for power. Each one wanted to have the upper hand over the other. The people in the city did not need anything, but they grew greedy and wanted to take over the belongings of others. In the quest to gain power and become richer, the people of the city started to fight and kill each other. Angered by the selfish behavior of the people, the presiding deity of the city created a hurricane that destroyed every bit of Tutaham. It spared no human or animal that came in its way. The fury of the hurricane left people devastated and it unleashed disease and death in its aftermath.
In most myths, whenever humans become selfish, and there is decline in human values and morals, some divine being introduces difficulties and problems in the lives of people to make them realize the importance of humanity. In this story, the people of the city became avaricious and selfish. With a surplus of all the riches to satisfy everyone, they still chose to squabble and fight for power. This irked their native god and he decided to teach them a harsh lesson. Repeatedly, various mythologies have driven home the lesson that as humans become headstrong and selfish, and start to meddle with each other’s lives thoughtlessly, calamity arises, usually driven by a wrathful deity who shakes people into awareness.
Explanation:
answer straight from pluto <3
a. the chair broke it's leg
b. the veggie cases are empty
d. the global pandemic makes me sick
is it a denotative languge or connotative languge?
Answer:
A. its an denotative languge
B. connotative languge
C. denotative languge
Explanation:
Answer:
A. Denotative
B. Denotative
C. Connotative
Explanation:
Denotative is more of just a statement, connotative is feelings
A large tree that was shattered by lightning is a fragment or a sentence?
Answer:
Fragment
Explanation:
Hope that helps!
Answer:
It's a sentence
Explanation:
The large tree is the subject, the verb is shattered. Hope this helps!
what should you do if you encounter a word you dont know while reading
Hello! Alright So there are Several things you can do if you Encounter a word you dont know while reading. So First of all you can Go And check the Definition in a dictionary, now In this second thing There are Steps!
Your first step is to go back and re-read the entire sentence. You probably lost track of what your were reading when you stumbled upon the new word.
Think about the content of the sentence. Do you understand the sentence without using the new word? Or is it incomprehensible?
Try underlining the unknown word. This will help you separate it from the rest of the sentence.
The Last thing You could do is
Start by looking at each part of the word in question. It is very helpful to look to see if the word has a common prefix.
Prefixes are the first part of the word. For example, a common prefix is "anti".
"Anti" means "against". Knowing this should help you figure out the meanings of words such as "antibiotic" or "antithesis".
"Extra" is a prefix that means "beyond". Use this to figure out words such as "extraterrestrial" or "extracurricular".
Other common prefixes are "hyper", "intro", "macro" and "micro". You can also look for prefixes such as "multi", "neo" and "omni".
Hope This Helps! May I have Brainliest?
Read the lines from Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken.” Then answer two questions.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
1.What do the two roads symbolize?
2.What theme might Frost be trying to express through the use of the road as a symbol?
Directions: Read the passage. Then answer the question that follows.
Lydia goes to the city to become an actress. The night before she leaves, her mother gives her a silver locket. It first belonged to Lydia’s grandmother, who gave it to Lydia’s mother on her wedding day. In the city, Lydia wears the locket when she needs good luck at an audition or when she feels lonely.
What is the locket a symbol of?
Answer: love you
Explanation:
Which statement reflects the importance of alliterative verse in an epic?
Answer:
An alliterative verse is the one that includes an alliteration, which refers to the repetition of initial consonant sounds of closely related syllables. This device is important because the repetition of sounds makes the words easier to memorize. The genre of epic has been closely related to oral communication, and in order to tell the epic, the narrator needs to memorize the poem. For this reason, the importance of alliterative verses in an epic is that they make the poem easy to memorize.
Answer:
it makes it easier to memories
Explanation:
Why edgenuity really sucks
Answer:
because its made to make you fail
Explanation:
In the fourth paragraph, Shamengwa's decision to place his awards "on a triangular scrap of shelf high in one corner of his house suggests that he
Answer:
The fact that he placed his awards on a triangular scrap suggests that he no longer placed much value on them
Explanation:
Shamengwa is a fiddle (or a violin player) who is partially challenged in one arm. He is described as an old man, a granduncle who has had his fair share of years.
Though he and his music are popular because they are emotive, the narrator states that he is seldom invited to popular jigs. His music was doubled-edged. It made people happy as much as it made them cry. Because of this, he wasn't wanted at every party. Parties were for dancing and happiness. He had a maverick way of expressing his soul through the violin.
His popularity has earned him a reasonable amount of awards, the kinds that were more Class B in nature. His awards meant little to him. To him, they were relics of the past. He'd rather have his grandniece play with them than have them properly kept or taken care of.
Cheers
Excerpt from The Fall of the House of Usher
How does the theme of man vs self apply to this passage?
A) The narrator is battling his own fear.
tiquity.
B) The narrator is struggling with his anger.
ed web-
The narrator is fighting his need for love.
had
between
condition
D)
The narrator is conquering a physical disability.
reminded
Answer: I believe the answer to this is "A" I hope this helps you :> have a great day
Answer:
Its A he is right on this one.
Explanation:
If people are convinced of their own infallibility, which of these attitudes do they most likely display?
A. They believe they are always right.
B. They are shy and full of self-doubt.
C. They are puzzled by complex issues
D. They have trouble making decisions.
making
Answer:
a
Explanation:
they believe they are always right
Imagine you get to relive your favorite holiday every day. What’s that liike IF U ANSWER U GET 50 points
Answer:I would be in pure happiness for the beginning,but then I would get kinda boring
Explanation:
Answer:
Fun
Explanation:
It will be fun living in a Christmas wonderland everyday. The felling of being full on thanksgiving day like no other. Wishing so hard for snow.And all the special season foods.And being cozy by the fire.
Is since I am so tall, I signed up for basketball, a compound or complex sentence.
Answer:
it's a complex sentence :)
Explanation:
what is Poppycock, Gibberish, Gobbledygook, Whippersnapper.
WHO ANSWER THIS I WILL PUT HIM IN THE BRAIN LIST !!!!!!
:-)
Answer:
Explanation:
Poppycock is a fancy word for nonsense!
Gibberish is unintelligent or meaningless words in speech or writing.
Gobbledygook means a language that is unintelligible or meaningless.
Whippersnapper is a unexperienced person who seems to be overconfident.
Please give me Brainliest! A rating and a Thanks would be nice, too!
Have a great day!
Doyle's narrator frequently addresses the reader directly as you. Why? What do these lines reveal about the writer's imagined AUDIENCE? Brian Doyle "Four Basketball Stories.
Answer: Doyle's narrator frequently addresses the reader directly as you. Why? What do these lines reveal about the writer's imagined AUDIENCE? Brian Doyle "Four Basketball Stories.
Explanation:
Find the subject(WILL BIVE BRAINLIEST TO FAST AND BEST ANSWER)
The magazine publisher choose bob picture for this months cover.
Answer:
The subject is he was a good citizien
Explanation:
What is a theme of the story teller
Answer:
by British author H.H. Munro, whose penname was Saki, explores the themes of pride, moral education, and improper behavior for children in the Edwardian time period.
Explanation:
pls help me to find the answer of the below photo
Answer:
Here we go!
On a stormy day filled with dark clouds and heavy rain, people had to carry their umbrellas in order to make it where they needed to go. With the several puddles, and restless winds, some people slipped and fell. But one girl loved to walk in the rain. She loved it so much that she walked out in it every time it rained. Because of her experience, she never slipped. The dark clouds and puddles pleased her and set her heart at ease. And no matter how people stared at her for doing this constantly, she never really cared. She was happy with what she did.
- A writer with a passion for creating stories.