Answer:
Passage 1 and 2 - Flashback.
Passage 3- Flash forward.
Explanation:
Flashback is the going back to the time in the past which was set before the present scene. Flashbacks provide the extra crucial information from the past to the current situation. They are a character's thinking or reminiscing of the times gone by. Passages 12 and 2 deal with the characters thinking back tro the times they had experienced or done. So, flashback will be matched with passage 1 and 2.
Flash-forward is the exact opposite of flashback. It represents the occurrence or presentation of scenes yet to come or expected to happen in the coming future scenes. Passage 3 reveals/ deals with what is to happen or to be expected in the future ("<em>Let me behold what I shall be in the days to come</em>") . This will be paired with passage 3.
Answer:
In the 6th grade I was more worried about fitting in then being myself. I dressed different, barely spoke, and hung out with the sort of people I didnt really care to be friends with. But because of all those things I did I was known as the popular girl, even though everyone who had known me before knew that wasnt true me. I got tired of putting on a fake show so after the first few weeks I quit and started acting like myself again. Everyone who I was hanging out with quit speaking to me, and pretended I no longer existed. All because I didnt dress like them even though I still acted the same.
Answer:It allows the reader to understand the lingering terror of the journey
Explanation:
took the test
The correct answer is B. She does not want to dwell on something that cannot be changed.
"Daughter of Invention" was written by Julia Alvarez and it tells the narrator's story about immigration. This particular story depicts the conflicts that arise out of the family's Dominican heritage.
<u>Answer:</u>
- the economic use of language
- a precise image conveyed through an unexpected metaphor
<u>Explanation:</u>
'In a Station of the Metro' is a very precise poem by Ezra Pound which exhibits the characteristics of modernist poetry that include:
- the economic use of language
- a precise image conveyed through an unexpected metaphor
The poet has tried to convey his message in minimum words (merely two lines) by using the metaphorical approach where he has linked the faces in the crowd to the wet, fallen flower petals on a bough.