Answer:
its A
Explanation:
a. use to
b. used to
b.believable
c.undetectable
d. entertaining
2. “But really, why don’t You…why don’t You Yourself do the judging?” Kugler asked pensively.
a.regretfully
b.eagerly
c.happily
d. thoughtfully
3. “The council has forbidden itinerant entertainers to stop on municipal property.
a.acrobatic
b.acting
c.country
d.traveling
5. [We] … began to talk about the weather again, … and other banal and insoluble questions.
a.trite
b.critical
c.controversial
d.unexpected
6. "Though another of Mohammed’s commandments—the one on alcoholic drinks—was broken (and without constraint, as I know now) no latitude was allowed with regard to pork."
a.argument
b.sharing
c.leeway
d.expense
7. The people in Eugene Ionesco’s story start to turn into _________
a. wingspanroaches.
b. monkeys.
c. rhinoceroses.
d. giraffes.
8. The “black sheep” in Italo Calvino’s fable causes problems because he is __________
a. honest.
b.gullible.
c.dishonest.
d. cruel.
9. Andrei Voznesensky compares a young girl’s first disappointment to “First _______”
a.Spring.
b.Raindrops.
c.Frost.
d.Skylark.
10. The Muslim narrator in “Forbidden Fruit” prides himself on his _______
a.appetite.
b.driving.
c.handwriting.
d.abstinence.
True or False
11. In “The Last Judgment,” a murderer learns that he will receive not divine but human justice.
12. Boris Pasternak was allowed to accept the Nobel Prize for Doctor Zhivago when it was awarded.
Europe II Unit Test multiple choice: 1. defied 2. habitual 3. thoughtfully 4. traveling 5. trite 6. leeway 7. rhinoceroses 8. honest 9. Frost 10. abstinence 11. true 12. false 13. simple sentence 14. complex sentence 15. compound sentence 16. adverbial clause 17. noun clouse 18. independent clause 19. adjectival clause
Answer: C) neither.
Explanation: A simile is a figure of speech that consists in making a comparison between elements that aren't obviously related, this comparison is made using the words "like" and "as." A metaphor is also a comparison but it is direct (it doesn't use the words "like" or "as"). The given sentence isn't an example of a simile, nor a metaphor, because it isn't comparing elements, when it says "velvet shoes" it is just describing the shoes using an adjective.
Postmodernism
Realism
Romanticism
Classism
Answer:
Realism
Explanation:
Realism in writing often referred to as Literary Realism, is a style of writing in which the writer depicts the reality by portraying mundane, everyday experiences as they are in real life. It is often associated with familiar people, places, and stories, primarily about the struggle of middle and lower classes of society.
In other words, Literary realism tends to portray a story as truthfully as possible rather than dramatizing or romanticizing the contents.
Literary Relaism is sometimes referred to as Victorian style of writing or literature which started in the 19th century, some of the examples includes:
1. Adam Bede by George Eliot
2. The Crucible by Arthur Miller
I took the test and I got 100%. The answer is (C) The experience of gender discrimination
Answer:
the answer is C
Explanation:
We will join him.
We will join him.
To ride bikes tomorrow.
To ride bikes tomorrow.
The snake is on the sidewalk.
The snake is on the sidewalk.
Javier is heading to the grocery store.
To ride bikes tomorrow
Add a subject and verb to fix the error.
We want to ride bikes tomorrow.