Answer:
The final part of the poem is a couplet.
The initial stanzas are divided into three quatrains.
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Answer:
What the speaker means in these lines is that reading goes beyond knowing how to read
.
Explanation:
In the Poem <em>Blind </em>by Fatima Naoot, what the author means in these lines is that the important thing in a reading is not the fact of knowing how to read, but of knowing how to interpret.
And that it doesn't matter if she is blind, she has to see beyond the retina to be able to get out of "earthlylife", that is, to go beyond.
Even in a few lines later the author says <em>"Reading does not require eyes"</em> and refers precisely to those previous lines, <u>because to read correctly you have to know how to make an interpretation, not just pronounce the words that are written in a text.
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Answer:
The words from the passage that have negative connotations
that support the author's point are, "chemicals", "disease", and "obesity"
Explanation:
From the following excerpt:
I want my food to be real food. I don't want my only option of nourishment to be chemicals disguised as food. Chemicals that could one day poison my body and lead me down a path of obesity and disease. And I want organic options to be affordably priced so everyone can afford to eat healthy. I believe that these are attainable goals if more people see the value in organic food.
The words "chemicals", "disease", and "obesity" describe a human condition that is clearly unhealthy and dangerous for everyone, this is because of the use of artificial components as ingredients of the food people consume every day.
<span>The structural element that is used in the excerpt by Anaya but not in the excerpt by Nye is D.logos. Logos is a rhetorical tool that is usually applied as appeal to logic and reason. The first excerpt sets its mood by representing events as they are, and there is a clear point of 'cause and effect': the information given by author is supported with reason. The second excerpt is a nice example of allusion irony, so it can be defined as literary anecdote.</span>
Answer:
if you had nothing in the world except for money you would be miserable. money can't buy the love that family gives you. money cant buy you true friendship