Answer: I had a very close encounter with one of the salesmen
Explanation:
c. Hecuba
b. Artemis
d. Athena
Answer:
A: Helen.
Explanation:
Helen of Troy, one of the most intriguing and famous of literary characters to have ever been created, is said to have been wooed and stolen by Paris to be taken to Troy. Menelaus, her husband, infuriated by this, set to recover her wife and revenge his honor, thus starting the Trojan War, most famously recounted in Homer´s Iliad.
b. consonance
c. assonance
d. onomatopoeia
The answer is D: onomatopoeia.
Fizz means the sound that a liquid makes as bubbles of gas are liberated, making a hissing sound.
It is an onomatopoeia, which is a kind of word that phonetically imitates, implies, suggests or represents the sound that it describes. The most common onomatopoeias in languages refer to the sounds that animals make like “oink” for a pig or “meow” for a cat. Onomatopoeias usually differ from one language to another.
Starry Night Studios offers classes in painting, drawing, sculpting, and woodworking. It refurbished an old townhome but did not invest in a new furnace. Winter is coming. If the furnace breaks, Starry Night Studios will most likely
Answer:
lose business
Explanation:
by Pat Shank
Mad wind whistlin' through walls this night
Charlie, my dog, whimpers in fright
Look at that sky—black upon black
Please, Moon, shine through, just one small crack
Ice pelts the windows—Ping! Ping! Ping!
I wonder if they feel the sting
I ask myself, do panes pained bleed?
Probably not, just hearts in need
I think of this window by my bed
Gifts it keeps giving to my head:
Shows me the stars on dark, long nights
Through it my dreams begin their flights
Morning it brings me warmth from the sun
Rainbows, too, I think just for fun
Flowers I see, red and yellow
Waves to me from girls and fellows
Shadows it bends as if in dance
On walls as I watch entranced
Take my secrets, I whisper soft
Into the night, may they take loft
Ice, go away—leave us alone
You and wind go somewhere—atone!
Time it is for winter to end
Spring's just got to be 'round the bend
These thoughts must have lulled me to sleep
Next I knew, in morning did creep
Looked at the glass, none worse for wear
Smiled to myself at the Sun's glare
Ground covered now with fresh white snow
Tree bent heavy shaped like a bow
A daffodil I think I saw
Pushing its head up through the thaw
I say my prayers and sip my tea
A glorious day this will be
So glad to be here one more time
Perhaps I can share one more rhyme
Give thanks to the makers of glass
With it the days beautifully pass
Keep it clean for me to see through
Don't get out much at 92
Which can you conclude about the 92-year-old speaker in the poem?
A.She relies on the window to be her gateway to the world; without it, she would miss out on life.
B.She is sad and scared that she must spend all of her days watching the world go by outside.
C.She loves looking out the window during the day, but the images it brings at night frighten her.