Answer:
1.smiled, grinned
2. lucky, favored
3. mocked, scoffed
4. soaked, drenched
5. happy, elated
Explanation: Denotation is the literal meaning of the word;
in 1. both words include a smile;
in 2. both words include some type of luck;
in 3. there is mockery involved;
in 4. both words denote something wet;
in 5. there is happiness involved.
All of the guests HAD gone to the concert in the park.
(But I think it could also be have, if you are talking about it happening in the present).
Answer: Or
Explanation:
A Virgule is a slash or stroke (/) and the two vurgules in the above excerpt are used as substitutes for the word 'or' to establish that either of the words or phrases are fine to use.
For instance, "my flash on the newsprint" or "my flash on the face".
Another instance, "she could have been Obachan back then" or "she could have been Obachanor just after the camps".
Answer:
present-tense narration
Explanation:
In present-tense narration, there is a sense of urgency used because it is used to tell a story that is happening in-the--moment thereby giving the reader a sense of immediacy.
In "Spanish Dancer" by Rainer Maria RIlke, this style of narration is employed thus:
<u>"And all at once it is completely fire.
</u>
<u>
One upward glance and she ignites her hair
</u>
<u>and, whirling faster and faster, fans her dress
</u>
<u>into passionate flames, till it becomes a furnace
</u>
<u>from which, like startled rattlesnakes, the long
</u>
<u>naked arms uncoil, aroused and clicking."</u>
Answer:
<em>In Titus Andronicus , he uses words like "ruthless" , "vast" , and 'gloomy" to describe forest. </em>
Hope it helps!