A. "Then he lifted his door, a huge stone, and set it in place." (Kline 32).
B. ". leaping up he laid hands on my crew. Two he seized and dashed to the ground like whelps, and
their brains ran out and stained the earth." (Kline 33).
C. “Stranger, you are a foreigner or a fool, telling me to fear and revere the gods, since the cyclops
care nothing for aegis-bearing Zeus; we are greater than they." (Kline 33).
D. "He arrived bearing a huge weight of dry wood to burn at suppertime" (Kline 32).
E. With this he drove the ram away from him out of doors, and I loosed myself when the ram was a
little way front he cave, then untied my men." (Kline 36).
E Those were my words, and this his cruel answer, "Then, my gift is this. I will eat Nobody last of all
his company, and all the others before him." (Kline 34).
Answer:
Hey. Good luck
Explanation:
"Then he lifted his door, a huge stone, and set it in place."
I am not very sure about it
Rome or Athens?
Answer: Athenian was a more direct democratic society. Rome's republic was more complicated, though they had hints of democracy here and there.
Explanation: I looked that zhit up on quora ;)
b. Like the play, the poem has Ismene trying to dissuade Antigone from defying Creon.
c. The poem and play both describe the moment when Haemon and Eurydice commit suicide after Antigone’s death.
d. The end of the poem shows Creon reduced to a lonely, decrepit man, as does the play.
William Butler Yeats’s poem “From the ‘Antigone’” parallels Sophocles’s Antigone because (a.) the speaker in the poem, as well as the chorus in the play, laments noble Antigone’s terrible fate.
In Sophocles's Antigone,Antigone commits suicide after Creon condemns her to death for burying Polynices and not obeying the king's orders. Therefore, it is her loyalty towards her brother what leads her to that terrible fate. After she dies, the chorus laments her fate and the curse on Oedipus's family. Moreover, in Yeats's poem "From the 'Antigone'", the speaker also laments Antigone's death, especially when he says "And yet I weep -- Oedipus' child Descends into the loveless dust".
The cookies smelled so good while they baked, I couldn't wait for them to finally be done.
The cookies smelled so good while they baked; I couldn't wait for them finally to done.
The cookies smelled so good while they baked, I couldn't wait for them to be done finally.
Answer:
"I would put The cookies smelled so good while they baked, I couldn't wait for them to finally be done."
Explanation:
This is the only sentence that is grammatically correct. The words have been placed in such a way as to maintain the coherence and cohesion of the text and this leaves the sentence coherent enough for the reader to understand what is happening in the text.
B. scan the book from front to back.
C. study the table of contents.
D. inspect the book jacket for notes about the author.
Answer:
D. Absolute
Explanation:
Absolute is not used in the comparative or superlative degree. It don't make any sense.