Answer:
Imagery
Explanation:
When writers or speakers use a sensory language, they are using imagery, this rhetorical device is characterized for being a form of vivid and descriptive language that evokes pictures or ideas in our minds that appeals to our senses, whether it might be our sight, hearing, smell, taste or touch.
<em>An example of this sensory language or imagery is "I touched the soft and warm pillow." </em>
<em>The words "soft" and "warm" describes the pillow by creating a mental picture and appeal to our sense of touch.</em>
Answer:
The excerpt from the text that best presents the dominant moral of the monk's tale is Thus Fortune with a light / Turn of her wheel brings men from joy to sorrow.
Explanation:
"The Monk's Tale" is a story from "The Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer. The stories that the Monk tells are full of strong moral and tragedy, as he uses the theme of fortune in all of them, more specifically the fortune of man and how they can not depend on it, as it is shown in the line "Thus Fortune with a light / Turn of her wheel brings men from joy to sorrow."
Answer: No, because the quotation marks are placed wrong and theres an unneccessary colon sign.
C, it would be Abraham's house, as it shows possession.