Answer:
The function of the underlined noun phrase is the direct object.
Explanation:
In the sentence "Now that I am a vegetarian, I try whichever recipes feature beans and fresh vegetables" the phrase "whichever recipes" represents the direct object that is being affected by the action of the verb "try" were "I" is the subject and the active part of the complete sentence. The other options refer to different parts of the speech.
a. The third-person point of view is an omniscient observer.b. The first-person point of view is voiced by the subjective Mr. Pontellier.c. The first-person point of view is an omniscient observer.d. The third-person point of view is voiced by the objective Doctor Mandelet.
Answer:
The statement that best describes the point of view in the excerpt is:
a. The third-person point of view is an omniscient observer.
Explanation:
We can safely eliminate options B and C, since there is no indication of a first-person narrator in the excerpt. For us to know it is a first-person narrator, first-person pronouns (I, we, us, our etc.) would have to be employed. We are, therefore, left with options A and D. Option D is impracticable. The excerpt - taken from the book "The Awakening" by Kate Chopin - talks of Doctor Mandelet. The narrator knows how the doctor feels. We are told he is tired of superficial social interactions. Still, that is not voiced by the Doctor himself. We have, thus, an omniscient third-person narrator, who knows of the characters' feelings, but remains anonymous.
A: The third-person point of view is an omniscient observer.
Answer:
preposition which is D ok
B. Whether or not to write in Italian
C. Whether or not to include the Catholic idea of Purgatory
D. Whether or not to cast himself as the main character
by Cecilia Woloch
—after Breton
My love with his hair of nightingales
With his chest of pigeon flutter, of gray doves preening themselves at dawn
With his shoulders of tender balconies half in shadow, half in sun
My love with his long-boned thighs the map of Paris of my tongue
With his ink-stained tongue, his tongue the tip
of a steeple plunged into milky sky
My love with his wishing teeth
With his fingers of nervous whispering, his fingers of a boy
whose toys were cheap and broken easily
My love with his silent thumbs
With his eyes of a window smudged of a train that passes in the night
With his nape of an empty rain coat
hung by the collar, sweetly bowed
My love with his laughter of an empty stairwell, rain all afternoon
With his mouth the deepest flower to which
I have ever put my mouth
Source: Woloch, Cecilia. “Blazon.” Blogalicious. Diane Lockward, 17 Jan. 2010. Web. 17 May 2011.
What makes this poem a blazon?
The poet uses rhyme and iambic pentameter.
The poet compares her love to beautiful things in nature.
The poem is written as a modern sonnet.
The poem uses hyperbole and imagery.
The poem is a blazon because THE POET COMPARES HER LOVE TO BEAUTIFUL THINGS IN NATURE.
In literature, the blazon refers to a poem that list series of physical attributes of a person or character. Most of the time, the character is usually a female. This type of poem was used freely during the Elizabethan period. This type of poem always compares the body parts of a subject to other things such as jewels, celestial body, natural phenomenon, etc.
Answer:
The poet compares her love to beautiful things in nature.
Answer:
protagonist
Explanation:
Protagonist: The main character of the story. This is the character who experiences the main conflict and has to solve it. It is the character driving the story. The character can be good or evil.