Answer:
Explanation:
What he explained is all men make mistakes but in this instant they made a bigger mistake.
B. The sonnet form was invented by Shakespeare.
C. The sonnet form is used to tell stories in poetry.
D. A sonnet is a free-verse poem without meter.
Answer:
Candelabrum, Candle, Candid, Candor, Candidate.
Explanation:
The prefix or root word "cand" means to be of brilliant whiteness, shine, or to be hot. Then the five words have different meanings but all of them related to one of these terms in a literal sense or metaphor, all of them have the quality of shine or light either the place where they are or themselves in the case of the words related to living things.
Following are five words that contain the Greek or Latin root/affix "cand-" and start with "cand":
Candle - a wax cylinder with a wick that produces light when it is lit.
Candela - a unit of luminous intensity, symbolized as "cd," used to measure the brightness of light sources.
Candid - characterized by openness, honesty, and sincerity.
Candor - the quality of being honest, open, and frank in speech or expression.
Incandescent - emitting light as a result of being heated, or characterized by intense emotion or passion.
These words all contain the root "cand-," which refers to glowing or brightness.
Learn more about Greek here:
#SPJ1
to give accurate information about buildings and places as they actually are, not as they are perceived
B.
to demonstrate to readers that the buildings were much larger than they appeared
C.
to suggest how the city would have looked to a bird flying overhead
D.
to illustrate to readers the difficulties that builders had when constructing various parts of the city
B. The speaker wonders what life will be like without the beloved grandfather.
C. As the speaker remembers their childhood, they realize they are relieved by their grandfather’s death.
D. As the speaker remembers childhood, they are emotionally reserved about their grandfather’s death.
I was four in this photograph fishing
with my grandparents at a lake in Michigan.
My brother squats in poison ivy.
His Davy Crockett cap
sits squared on his head so the raccoon tail
flounces down the back of his sailor suit.
My grandfather sits to the far right
in a folding chair,
and I know his left hand is on
the tobacco in his pants pocket
because I used to wrap it for him
every Christmas. Grandmother's hips
bulge from the brush, she's leaning
into the ice chest, sun through the trees
printing her dress with soft
luminous paws.
I am staring jealously at my brother;
the day before he rode his first horse, alone.
I was strapped in a basket
behind my grandfather.
He smelled of lemons. He's died—
but I remember his hands.
The speaker holds fond memories of their grandfather and wonders what life will be like without him.
The speaker's point of view towards the grandfather can be inferred from the poem. The speaker remembers their childhood fishing trip with their grandparents and reminisces about their grandfather's hands. This suggests that the speaker holds fond memories of their grandfather. Therefore, the best description of the speaker's point of view towards the grandfather is option B. The speaker wonders what life will be like without the beloved grandfather.
#SPJ3
Answer:
It produces shivers down the spine, or a feeling of unease.
Explanation:
The narrator hasn't said anything in this excerpt that makes them hard to believe, or unreliable. This excerpt is not particularly optimistic either. There is no blood and gore, but the narrator is clearly made uncomfortable by the painting. So the excerpt produces shivers down the spine, or a feeling of unease.
Answer:
D
Explanation: