Answer:
Plead or Urge
Explanation:
Plead's Definition is "to beg or request."
This is similar to Implore's definition of 'to beg urgently or piteously'.
However, urge could also work in this situation as one of its definitions is 'to beg, push for, or encourage'
Either could work in this situation and shouldn't alter the end sentence very much.
In Sentences:
"Plead drivers to follow parking rules"
or
"Urge drivers to follow parking rules"
A suitable synonym for 'implore' in the phrase 'implore drivers to follow parking rules' could be 'urge', 'beg', 'plead with', or 'entreat'.
The word 'implore' in the context 'implore drivers to follow parking rules' means earnestly asking or begging for something to happen. In this context, a suitable synonym could be 'urge', 'beg', 'plead with', or 'entreat'. So an alternative way to say this could be 'urge drivers to follow parking rules', 'beg drivers to abide by parking rules' or 'plead with drivers to respect parking rules'. These synonyms maintain the meaning of 'implore' and continue to express the sense of earnestly asking or pleading.
An example in the context of campus parking could be: 'By paving the area on the corner of Twelfth and Locust Streets to allow parking on that lot, we could urge the students and faculty to follow parking rules, enhancing campus aesthetic while providing a solution to the increased need for parking.'
#SPJ11
metaphor.
alliteration.
allusion.
apostrophe
Answer:
I too believe the answer to be letter B) alliteration.
Explanation:
The lines we must analyze are:
"Odors, when sweet violets sicken,
Live within the sense they quicken."
By defining each of the devices provided in the question, we can choose the one that applies to those lines. A metaphor is comparison between two different things stated without the help of support words ("like" or "as"). A metaphor claims that "thing A is thing B", for example: your eyes are stars. In the lines above, we do not have a metaphor. There is no comparison being made.
Alliteration is a literary device in which sounds or letters at the beginning of words that are close to each other in a structure are repeated. Such repetition creates mood and rhythm. That is precisely what we have in the lines above. The letter s is repeat in three close words:
"Odors, when sweet violets sicken,
Live within the sense they quicken."
An allusion is a figure of speech in which a reference is made to something or someone, but in an indirect manner. For instance: you are more beautiful than Aphrodite - that's an allusion to a Greek mythology figure. The author does not explain who Aphrodite is, he simply mentions her trusting the audience will grasp the reason why she was mentioned. We do not have an allusion in Shelley's lines.
Apostrophe is a figure of speech in which the author of a poem speaks directly to someone who is not there, someone who is dead, or an inanimate object. As we can note, that does not happen in the lines we are studying. If the speaker had been talking to the odors instead of about them, then we would have an apostrophe.
The correct answer would be B. alliteration
Im 100% sure that the correct answer!!!
b. You payes your money and takes your choice.
c. You pay your money and take your choice.
d. You pays your money and takes your choice.
Answer:
I apologize for the confusion, but Alice Walker is not the author of "Everyday Use." The correct author of "Everyday Use" is Alice Walker herself. There isn't an accident mentioned in the story related to Alice Walker's early life. "Everyday Use" is a short story that focuses on themes of heritage, identity, and the tension between tradition and progress. It tells the story of a mother and her two daughters, Dee and Maggie, and their conflicting perspectives on their family's quilts and other objects.
Explanation: