<span>"His native home deep-imaged in his soul.
As the tired ploughman," homer's odessey
I'm not to sure, but I think that it is comparing the ploughman to his soul</span>
Why does Edwards claim that nonbelievers are akin to spiders in "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God"?
<span>II. Spiders are powerless should a rock fall on them.
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The passage states that a spider's web is not strong enough to stop a falling rock. Its home will be destroyed and the spider must rebuild his web again.
1.) We receive no formal training in listening
2.) Speaking as a skill is seen as more important than listening
3.) Filters keep us from listening without bias
Answer:
The answers are
B. “fear of gangs that controlled”
D. “enforced a 6 p.m. curfew”
E. “shot on the spot”
F. “bodies littered the dirt streets”
Marley was thrilled.
The description of Marley before this shows him leaping, spinning, running and pouncing. All of these are very energetic actions that show he is not just slightly happy. The speaker is using an understatement "Marley was a little excited" to emphasis how actually thrilled Marley was to play ball.
They imply that Myra is uncomfortably hot.
In the passage, the setting is described as noon on a sunny day in August. From this description we can infer that it is hot out. When Myra says, "This sun is cooking me," we can infer that she is in the hot sun and can feel the heat as though she is being cooked. She does not indicate that she is in pain or that she is unhappy. It simply means that she is hot.