I believe the answer is the third choice: Rockwell said that he had been striving to completely capture everything.
Take a look at the word 'always' this line:
"Right from the beginning, I always strived to capture everything I saw as completely as possible" (Rockwell).
The word always indicate that the strive to capture everything started in the past and still continue until today.
The usage of past tenses in first, second, and the fourth option indicates taht the strive to capture everything is no longer exist today.
by combining English and Spanish, her two native languages
Lorna Dee Cervantes celebrates her culture in the poem “Freeway 280” by combining English and Spanish. The way she does this is by using Spanish words for things/people almost interchangeably and with ease. What this does is highlight bilingualism, which is a linguistic tendency of her culture.
b. Stand
c. Run
d. Stride
Answer: stride
Explanation:
B. the laborers' fundamental unity
C. the laborers' need for redemption
D. the laborers' bitterness for their condition
Answer:
B. the laborers' fundamental unity
Explanation:
The majority of the laborers in the poem are happy as they work. One sign of their satisfaction in their efficiency is that they all sing as they work. The picture of the singing laborers is rehashed all through the poem to demonstrate the topic of happiness and satisfaction in work. Walt Whitman portrays this in the poem:
I hear America singing, the varied carols I hear...
The laborers have various voices and various songs. The lyric's storyteller depicts how every one of the laborers are "singing with open mouths their strong melodious songs."
Answer:
diuqebwpnoreboiuflicanjkwacnkjlebliudiuweqbpiuewqbiupwvbeiu
Explanation:
THANK YOU
First-person
Limited Third-person
Omniscient First-person