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frez [133]
2 years ago
13

which of the following is the best example of a sentence you would find in a work of literary nonfiction?

English
2 answers:
Tju [1.3M]2 years ago
6 0

For apex

C. Before the sun begins to glow pink on the horizon, the fishermen are at work on their boats in the dim light of their lanterns.

Greeley [361]2 years ago
4 0
The answer would be = D
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Which scenario is an example of understatement?
patriot [66]

Answer:

The answer should be A

Explanation:

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2 years ago
Summarize paragraphs 21 and 22, maintaining meaning and logical order. How do Odysseus and his men escape? What makes paragraph
gladu [14]

Answer:

Penelope gets Odysseus’s bow out of the storeroom and announces that she will marry the suitor who can string it and then shoot an arrow through a line of twelve axes. Telemachus sets up the axes and then tries his own hand at the bow, but fails in his attempt to string it. The suitors warm and grease the bow to make it supple, but one by one they all try and fail.

Meanwhile, Odysseus follows Eumaeus and Philoetius outside. He assures himself of their loyalty and then reveals his identity to them by means of the scar on his foot. He promises to treat them as Telemachus’s brothers if they fight by his side against the suitors.Page 2

Summary: Book 21

Penelope gets Odysseus’s bow out of the storeroom and announces that she will marry the suitor who can string it and then shoot an arrow through a line of twelve axes. Telemachus sets up the axes and then tries his own hand at the bow, but fails in his attempt to string it. The suitors warm and grease the bow to make it supple, but one by one they all try and fail.

Meanwhile, Odysseus follows Eumaeus and Philoetius outside. He assures himself of their loyalty and then reveals his identity to them by means of the scar on his foot. He promises to treat them as Telemachus’s brothers if they fight by his side against the suitors.

XVideo SparkNotes: Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities summary

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When Odysseus returns, Eurymachus has the bow. He feels disgraced that he cannot string it, because he knows that this failure proves his inferiority to Odysseus. Antinous suggests that they adjourn until the next day, when they can sacrifice to Apollo, the archer god, before trying again. Odysseus, still disguised, then asks for the bow. All of the suitors complain, fearing that he will succeed. Antinous ridicules Odysseus, saying that the wine has gone to his head and that he will bring disaster upon himself, just like the legendary drunken centaur Eurytion. Telemachus takes control and orders Eumaeus to give Odysseus the bow. Needless to say, Odysseus easily strings it and sends the first arrow he grabs whistling through all twelve axes.

Summary: Book 22

Before the suitors realize what is happening, Odysseus shoots a second arrow through the throat of Antinous. The suitors are confused and believe this shooting to be an accident. Odysseus finally reveals himself, and the suitors become terrified. They have no way out, since Philoetius has locked the front door and Eumaeus has locked the doors to the women’s quarters. Eurymachus tries to calm Odysseus down, insisting that Antinous was the only bad apple among them, but Odysseus announces that he will spare none of them. Eurymachus then charges Odysseus, but he is cut down by another arrow. Amphinomus is the next to fall, at the spear of Telemachus.

Telemachus gets more shields and swords from the storeroom to arm Eumaeus and Philoetius, but he forgets to lock it on his way out. Melanthius soon reaches the storeroom and gets out fresh arms for the suitors. He isn’t so lucky on his second trip to the storeroom, however, as Eumaeus and Philoetius find him there, tie him up, and lock him in.

A full battle now rages in the palace hall. Athena appears disguised as Mentor and encourages Odysseus but doesn’t participate immediately, preferring instead to test Odysseus’s strength. Volleys of spears are exchanged, and Odysseus and his men kill several suitors while receiving only superficial wounds themselves. Finally, Athena joins the battle, which then ends swiftly. Odysseus spares only the minstrel Phemius and the herald Medon, unwilling participants in the suitors’ profligacy. The priest Leodes begs unsuccessfully for mercy.

Explanation:

ME ACTUALLY TRYING!!!!

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2 years ago
Write continuously for 10 minutes in response to this prompt: "At this moment, I am thinking about _____." This is a free writin
laiz [17]

Answer:

<u>At this moment, I am thinking about the reconstruction of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame and I am making some important questions about it.</u>

Explanation:

At this moment, I am thinking about the reconstruction of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame and I am making some important questions about it. The first question that comes to my mind is how much could the reconstruction cost?. It will reach several hundred million euros, according to experts. The second question I have is who will contribute the money for the reconstruction? According to what I read in the newspapers, there were already up to 750 million euros in donation commitments. My third question is how long could the repair work take? The forecasts on the restoration deadlines are very variable, the works will take between 10 and 20 years at least. And my final question is when will the cathedral be open to the public? Again, according to what I read this morning, the interior of the cathedral could be reopened to the public quickly, since it was desired by both the Mayor's Office and the archbishopric of Paris. However, first it must verify the solidity of the structure of the monument. Hopefully, the restoration will have a positive outcome after all the complex work that will be necessary to accomplish this goal.

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2 years ago
In this sonnet, the speaker describes a powerful love for someone with no personal merits. Which lines describe this puzzling ab
FromTheMoon [43]

The lines that describe this puzzling ability in the speaker's beloved to control his reasoning faculties are “Whence hast thou this becoming of things ill,/That in the very refuse of thy deeds/There is such strength and warrantise of skill,/That, in my mind, thy worst all best exceeds?”

 

<span>In Shakespeare’s 150th sonnet the puzzling ability is described as the capacity to make bad things look good in her and to perform the most worthless actions so skillfully that the speaker thinks that her worst is better than anyone else’s best.</span>

4 0
2 years ago
Why does Dickinson set the poem “Dying” in an ordinary bedroom, which isn’t even described? What might be her purpose in choosin
storchak [24]
I would think that setting the scene of someone dying is appropriate to be in a bedroom where a sick person would most likely be (if not in a hospital) such as someone in palliative care for example and the bedroom stillness is commented on  broken only by a fly and whose buzz perhaps accentuated the otherwise stillness. If the person's death was outside or in a public place it would more likely be the result of a, say an accident, or say an assassination such as that of Martin Luther King  so since it is inside in a bedroom it indicates the dying is just a normal death from illness and/or old age.


8 0
2 years ago
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