Answer:
1. To make a comparison.
4. To suggest how one event relates to another.
Explanation:
On the contrary, compares two different things as different or opposite.
Example:
This flower smells amazing. On the contrary, this other one doesn't.
As a result, suggest the result or output of something, therefore, suggesting how it relates.
Example:
I was walking down the street when I tipped on a rock. As a result, I was injured.
"On the contrary is used to make a comparison. On the contrary, as a result, is used to suggest how one event relates to the other. As a result, you will get this question right"
Answer:
On the contrary - To suggest how one event relates another
After dinner - To indicate a shift in time
Back at the hotel - To show a change in location
As a result - To make a comparison
(The last one i'm not so confident about it being right so sorry if it's wrong)
Answer: B) The poems have different speakers.
Explanation: When reading a poem or a text we need to consider that even if it is written in first person (using the pronoun "I") it doesn't mean that the person speaking is the author, it usually is the character that speaks. In the given excerpts, both by Robert Frost, we can see that they have different speakers, by recognizing the different opinions they have about spring. Also the speaker in the first excerpt, doesn't have any animals "But here there are no cows. Before I built a wall I'd ask to know What I was walling in or walling out" and the speaker in the second excerpt has a calf.
b. The use of iambic pentameter
c. Characters based on real people
d. The scenes with the witches
D. The scenes with the witches
Just finished APEX
Ye hearers, take it of worth, old and young,
And forsake Pride, for he deceiveth you in the end.
And save me from the fiend's boast,
That I may appear with that blessed host
That shall be saved at the day of doom.
I perceive, here in my majesty,
How that all creatures be to me unkind,
Living without dread in worldly prosperity
He that loveth riches I will strike with my dart,
His sight to blind, and from heaven to depart,
Except that Almsdeeds be his good friend,
In hell for to dwell, world without end.
Pairs
Everyman
Death
Doctor
God
Answer:
The answer to this question is:
"Everyman"
And save me from the fiend's boast,
That I may appear with that blessed host
That shall be saved at the day of doom.
"Death"
4. He that loveth riches I will strike with my dart,
His sight to blind, and from heaven to depart,
Except that Almsdeeds be his good friend,
In hell for to dwell, world without end.
"Doctor"
Ye hearers, take it of worth, old and young,
And forsake Pride, for he deceiveth you in the end
"God"
I perceive, here in my majesty,
How that all creatures be to me unkind,
Living without dread in worldly prosperity