answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
STatiana [176]
2 years ago
12

"Self-Reliance" is an example of _____.

English
1 answer:
Readme [11.4K]2 years ago
3 0

I believe that the answer is D. "Self-Reliance" is an example of a short memoir. It a record of events written by a person having intimate knowledge of them and based on personal observation.

You might be interested in
Read the excerpt from an article. Lewis Township officials have been publicly—and loudly—quarreling for what seems like forever
shusha [124]

From the excerpt you posted it looks like the writer's primary purpose is to persuade the audience to share his point of view.

This can be seen in phrases like "it seems to me that the decision is easy", where he implies that he has enough knowledge to see something that the Township officials are not seeing.  

5 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Will mark brainliest!!
agasfer [191]

Answer:

Floats downstream, the trade winds soft, and dawn-light lawn.

Explanation:

These three are all metaphors of freedom. These are what the free bird did and encountered in the poem.

The caged bird experienced 2. his narrow cage and 5. the grave of dreams.

(credited by brainly.com/question/1995468)

4 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
HELP MAX POINTS ( Read the boarded window by, Ambrose Bierce.) Create an alternative ending for the story you read in the lesson
charle [14.2K]

#1)  Which story did you read?


Answer: Out of all the stories presented to read I chose “The Boarded Window” by Ambrose Bierce.


#2) Describe the physical setting of the story.


Answer: Well in this story we are provided with a background by the narrator, who is a boy whose name we never know, He goes on to provide details about the region and details about Murlock's life and his cabin. Also it seems that this boy grew up near Murlock's cabin and also he knows the secret of the boarded window.


#3) Which words or descriptions contribute to the emotional setting or mood?


Answer: I believe that the words and descriptions that contribute to the emotional setting or mood are the ones that are presented when Murlock's wife finally shuts her eyes and we witness in the story how Murlock tries to cope with her supposed death. Also when he falls asleep with the body of his wife on top of the table only to wake up to an unexpected development.


#4) What is the mood that results from the author’s use of description?


Answer: I believe that the mood that results from the author’s use of description is that of contempt. This was because of the way that he decided to live after what had happened to her wife and the fact that he had played a role in her death.


#5) What is the theme?


Answer: There are two themes in this story. One is Death and the second them at the very end is that of the Supernatural.


#6) How do the final lines of the story influence the meaning or theme of the story?


Answer: The way that the final lines of the story influence the meaning of the story is by making us realize that his wife was never really dead. It leaves the reader in horror to realize the fact that she had fallen prey to a panther. She probably in fact fought for her life against the panther before she was carried away through the window.


7) What techniques does the author use to create suspense throughout the story?


Answer: I believe that the techniques that the author uses to create suspense throughout the story were the complication of Murlock’s problems and the unpredictable ending when we realize that the wife was never dead.


#8) Do you think the techniques you identified in question four were effective?


Answer: I believe that the techniques of complicating matters and being unpredictable were very effective.


#9) Did they create suspense for you?


Answer: They did, especially when it starts to look bad for Murlock when his wife fall ill.


#10) In your opinion, what technique could be used more effectively?


Answer: I think that if there had been more about why the narrator in the story had such detailed knowledge about what happen to Murlock, then the story would have had a greater impact. For example what if the young boy was Murlock’s relative all along.


#11) What techniques does the author use to create a surprise ending?


Answer: I believe that the technique that the author used to create a surprise ending was tension or micro-tension. He absorbed the readers in the moment-by-moment tension that kept me in suspense over what would happen in the next minute.


#12) What was your experience in reading this story?


Answer: My experience in reading this story was really immersive. Once I started reading my own imagination would star assuming what was going to happen next in the story. For example when his wife fell unconscious there was a part of me that actually thought that he was being to hasty to conclude that she was dead. But the end was totally unexpected.


#13) Did it evoke fear or physically have an effect on you?


Answer: It did not evoke fear in me but, it did make me feel the suspense and I could only try to imagine how I would have felt in a situation like that.


I hope it helps, Regards.



8 0
2 years ago
Explain how lady macbeth's actions in act v, scene 1, draw meaning from the images of blood, darkness, and sleep that have run t
Vinvika [58]
When Macbeth kills Duncan earlier in the play, Lady Macbeth has to go back and return the daggers to the dead guards so it looks like they were the ones who killed Duncan. When they hear the knocking at the gate she says "a little water clears us of this dead", referring to the blood on both of their hands. At this point in the play she is very casual about the murder and still led by her ambition. In 5.1, this idea of blood being on her hands has completely consumed her and even though it is not apparent her subconscious still sees it and it's impossible for her to get her hands clean enough.

Darkness is an image that is used often in the play as well. In 5.1, the reader learns that Lady Macbeth asks to have a candle with her at all times. This shows that she has become afraid of the darkness that earlier she so easily welcomed. Also, it is implied that even though her eyes are open she is asleep and cannot see--another type of darkness.

When Macbeth kills Duncan he says that he hears voices calling out that "Macbeth has murdered sleep"--sleep is nourishing and important, and by killing Duncan Macbeth thinks that he has ruined everyone's ability to sleep soundly (mostly his own). We see these images return in Lady Macbeth in 5.1 because she is sleep-walking. So, in a way, Macbeth was right--he 'murdered' her ability to sleep soundly because of the actions they both took. 

The only way this scene redeems Lady Macbeth is that it shows she does have a conscience. For so much of the play she is so strong, ambitious, and ruthless--she has no issue with shaming Macbeth into killing Duncan to get what she wants. As Macbeth grows in his own ambition and blood-lust, we do not see as much of Lady Macbeth, but it helps here to know that she actually does feel bad about all of the murder and it's catching up with her subconscious and killing her.
3 0
2 years ago
Read the excerpt from "Daughter of Invention". Yoyo didn't need much encouragement. She put her nose to the fire, as her mother
katrin2010 [14]
I encountered this question before. The underlined idiom was "SHE PUT HER NOSE TO THE FIRE". This question also had choices. These were:

<span>She was cold as she wrote her speech, so she sat by the fire.
She worked hard to finish her speech for the assembly.
She was proud of the speech once she finished it.
She finished the speech in a very short amount of time.

The underlined idiom tells the reader that SHE FINISHED THE SPEECH IN A VERY SHORT AMOUNT OF TIME.

When you put your nose to the fire, you don't last long because of the heat. Thus, you only spend a short amount of time putting your nose to the fire.</span>
5 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Other questions:
  • Which of these sentences highlights Widow Wycherly’s vanity in Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story "Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment"?
    11·2 answers
  • ‘‘Smoke from a factory dirties the local housing and poisons crops.’’ Identify the nature of the...
    9·1 answer
  • Read the excerpt below and answer the question.
    10·2 answers
  • Which rule would help you punctuate the bold portion of this sentence correctly? “Of course we’re in a hurry; isn’t the bus abou
    8·2 answers
  • Read this excerpt from the prologue of Shakespeare’s play Henry V, in which King Henry is referred to as Harry. A kingdom for a
    15·2 answers
  • Which of these quotes most shows nick's bias for gatsby? a. [t]here was something gorgeous about him [gatsby], some heightened s
    11·2 answers
  • 100PPOINTSS
    12·2 answers
  • “All sorts of pleasant things happened about that time, for the new friendship flourished like grass in spring.” — Louisa May Al
    5·1 answer
  • Ben and Tom's discussion reveals that...
    5·2 answers
  • D Underline the subject in the following sentences:
    7·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!