Answer:
The type of analogy used in the sentence"Water is to moisten as spade is to dig" is function analogy
Explanation:
A function analogy also called purpose analogy compares the function of two things, in the sentence "Water is to moisten as spade is to dig" we are comparing one of the basic functions of water which is to get things to moisten with the way we can use a spade which is digging, basically we are referring to their elementary use.
1) Raised
2) Emerged from
3) Made a way into
Answer: 3) Made a way into.
Explanation: The connotation of a word is the meaning given by the context or even by the readers based on their emotions or personal experiences. It is the antonym of denotation, which is the literal meaning of the word. There are words like "broached" that according to the context in which it is used, it can have different meanings. In the given excerpt from Orpheus and Eurydice, the meaning of the word "broached" is "made a way into" and it is referring to a mortal making his way into the Underworld.
Flat character is a term used to describe characters that doesn't change throughout the story, and that are not complicated; flat character is the opposite of round character (a complex character that changes over time).
King Hrothgar in the epic story Beowulf, is considered a flat character because when the story is being told, he is an old King. Hrothgar has already lived and reached maturity so he doesn't change or develop and he is not complicated, the only thing complicated about King Hrothgar is that he doesn't have a successor ready to take the throne (and that complication is not directly related to the character's attributes).
The speakers of both poems achieve contentment as "the speakers express humility before a larger and greater force." So, in both poems the best statement describes humility.
The choices given to the given question are:
(i) In both poems, the speakers consider themselves insignificant.
(ii) In both poems, the speakers express a great deal of pride.
(iii) In both poems, the speakers express humility before a larger and greater force - (Correct answer).
(iv) In both poems, the speakers express great doubt as to their abilities.
This is due to the speaker's perception that their own sense of self-worth is unimportant because, for them, it expresses a great lot of pride and greater doubt about their abilities in the poems "Deliverance From Another Sore Fit" and "A Thought on the Inestimable Blessing of Reason."
Therefore, the third option from the list is the one that should be selected.
Check out the link below to learn more about speaker's contentment;
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By reading the poem Sonnet 13 by Elizabeth Barrett, it's possible to understand that the beloved wants the speaker to find enough words to express her love. The poem says "The love I bear thee, finding words enough, And hold the torch out, while the winds are rough, Between our faces, to cast light on each?" using images to imply that it is asked from the speaker that she finds the words to express what is inside of her, by "holding the torch out", even though the winds are rough, what could put her feelings in danger. The beloved requires that the speaker would cast "light" on both of their faces, enlighting their connection and relationship, and that could only be done if she took action "into speech", as the poem says, "finding words enough" to express herself.
The speaker responds to the beloved's request by questioning it, which can be understood because she ends up "(...) to cast light on each?" with a question mark. Moreover, the speaker says "I cannot teach My hand to hold my spirit so far off From myself (...) of love hid in me out of reach". The poem implies that the beloved's request is impossible to be fulfilled because it is out of her reach. Expressing her love is something that the speaker can't "teach" herself, because that would drive her most deep emotions, her "spirit", away. She ends up saying "Nay, let the silence of my womanhood Commend my woman-love to thy belief (...) By a most dauntless, voiceless fortitude, Lest one touch of this heart convey its grief" which means that she denies the beloved's request, by letting her silence commit and honor her "woman-love", her feelings, in a fortitude held with determination. The speaker intends to avoid the risk of love end up causing loss and grief in her life, even if it's the loss of herself.
The speaker response suggests that she has real feelings, that they are strong inside herself. They are pictured as a "torch" capable to "cast light on each". When she says "love hid", it can be understood that the love is there, but hidden inside her and that expressing it would be betraying herself. Putting her love in speech, transforming it into words, the speaker would risk her spirit and deepest identity. She denies the beloved's request, which means that she has a strong personality, that she knows herself, and is not willing to put her most precious feelings at risk. The poem says "(...) I stand unwon, however wooed", what proves how difficult it is to "win" the speaker and make her break her fortitude. However, she can also be seen as a person scared of opening up and taking risks, who always prefers to stay in omission.
Answer:
ExplanatiBy reading the poem Sonnet 13 by Elizabeth Barrett, it's possible to understand that the beloved wants the speaker to find enough words to express her love. The poem says "The love I bear thee, finding words enough, And hold the torch out, while the winds are rough, Between our faces, to cast light on each?" using images to imply that it is asked from the speaker that she finds the words to express what is inside of her, by "holding the torch out", even though the winds are rough, what could put her feelings in danger. The beloved requires that the speaker would cast "light" on both of their faces, enlighting their connection and relationship, and that could only be done if she took action "into speech", as the poem says, "finding words enough" to express herself.on: