Picts
Just took the test and celts was wrong
B. fair and just
C. ambitious and vengeful
D. foolish and proud
Answer:
The answer is Welcome To The World, Baby Girl
Explanation:
The major words in the titles of books, articles, and songs are capitalized.
Short prepositions or the articles "the," "a,"or "an," are not capitalized unless they are the first word in the title.
B. Diverse
C. Nature
D. Life
The root word bi(o)- means Life. Hence, option D is correct.
The term bio's Greek source means "life." Examples of words from this root word that are often used in English lexicon include biological, biography, and amphibian. Biology, also known as the science of "life," is one simple term that makes bio easier to remember.
The Latin-derived English prefix bi- and its Greek equivalent di- both denote the number "two." Particularly bi-, these "two" prefixes are frequently employed. Let's start with the often used prefix bi-, which signifies "two" in English. Wheels are seen on bicycles.
The word "life" is derived from the Germanic Old English word lf. The equivalent words in German and Dutch are leib and lijf, respectively. The word "liv" is used in all three of the major Scandinavian languages: Swedish, , and Norwegian.
Thus, option D is correct.
For more information about Greek root for life, click here:
#SPJ2
b. symbolism
c. allusion
d. alliteration
The poetic device that Poe uses here is Alliteration.
Alliteration is the repetition of the same letter in consecutive words, it is commonly used by poets, and it helps to transmit a lot of emotions to the readers.
The other options represent devices that are not used in these lines, repetition is the use of the same word at the beginning of phrases,symbolism is to talk about something to represent something else, and allusion makes reference to something that is well-known by others.
b. Adverbs modify adjectives.
c. Adverbs modify nouns.
d. Adverbs modify adverbs.
C.
This is because an adverb is a word that modifies/describes a verb -he sings loudly-, an adjective -very tall-, another adverb -ended too quickly-, or even a whole sentence -Fortunately, I had brought an umbrella-. Adverbs often end in -ly, but some -such as fast- look exactly the same as their adjective counterparts. So, everything but answer C. is actually an adverb.
Hope this helps! I know the other guy answered but I wanted to anyway.
I also just noticed this was asked in 2016 but oops.