Answer:
"To show how they loved me and cared for me, the High Consorts also sent a responsible eunuch to report on how I had 'consumed viands.' This too was a formality."
Explanation:
The answer was B for me but always check your answers because sometimes they don't line up!
Hope this helped! :)
B. I thought about what he'd said soon I realized he was right.
C. You and I and the whole team will go.
D. I went home and ate and ate.
A. Before lunch, I played volleyball; after lunch I did again.
B. I thought about what he'd said soon I realized he was right.
C. You and I and the whole team will go.
D. I went home and ate and ate.
Among the sentences that is considered a run – on is ‘I thought about what he'd said soon I realized he was right’. The answer is letter B.
A.
passive voice
B.
active voice
b. He describes Fate as fickle.
c. He personifies Fate as a powerful person.
d. He compares Fate to a wheel in motion.
I also think that the answer is C.
Narrow, leaning, and silent best indicate that Prufrock feels isolated.
But the final line, "Till human voices wake us, and we drown," suggests that there is no getting away from the poised conversation over the tea cups. While the poem hardly qualifies as a forceful conclusion, it is the proper one and does not mock Prufrock's hazy romanticism.
Eliot writes "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" in the decidedly modernist Imagism style. The foundation of the Imagism literary movement, which is closely related to modernism, is the idea that poetry should be composed of accurate descriptions of tangible imagery.
To know more about Prufrock, refer to:
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