Answer: Yukon was straining to break loose the ice that bound it down.
Air-holes formed, fissures sprang and spread apart, while thin sections of ice fell through bodily into the river.
And amid all this bursting, rending, throbbing of awakening life, under the blazing sun.
Explanation:Descriptive langauge is the one that gives us an effective description of what is happening in the story, in a way that through those descriptive words we are able to have a picture or an idea in mind of what happens.
Answer with Explanation:
The speaker depicts the Americans as unable to cherish the beautiful moments because they are <em>always in a hurry</em> to think about what other things they can accomplish due to short time. This shows their materialistic side that once they achieve one thing, they relax and, in just a moment, they become violent again to get more than they achieved.
They always want to achieve things easily <em>without thinking about the consequences of their actions</em> on others because they want to be <u>easily gratified. </u>They are not immediately contented nor do they find things perfect for their satisfaction. Thus, they are always<u> restless and anxious</u> and it makes them<em> unhappy</em> even if they have the abundance of things.
The error is in italics and bolded for you:
<em>THERE'S</em> NOW SEVEN NEW FLAVORS!
The correct way to write the sentence should be like this:
<em>THERE ARE</em> NOW SEVEN NEW FLAVORS!
The reason it is <em>There are </em>and not <em>there's(there is)</em>, is because you are talking about the new flavors being in the present tense form. Like... it's hard to explain, I guess...
Hope this helps!!!!
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It suggests the narrator is traveled without thinking of the time.
This one makes the most sense because he says "at length, I found myself" some traveled for a while. "As the shades of the evening drew on" supports that he was traveling without hinting of the time because night draws on unexpectedly.
<span>The correct answer is D. elation. These are the exact lines from the poem "Love After Love" by Derek Walcott: "The time will come / when, with elation / you will greet yourself..." Obviously, these lines show us that we will be elated when we meet ourselves at one point in our lives. The poem tells us that we should love ourselves, and not only other people, and that we should enjoy our lives while we still can.</span>