Answer:
B
Explain: listen if you where her you would do the same you would act smug or sarcastic.
A porch or walkway attached to a building.
Honestly idk how I got the answer... Let's just say this: GOOGLE IS YOUR FRIEND
Answer:
Question 1
B. Contemplation of the beauty of nature
Explanation:
- Looking into the first case, the persona reference to "may sit and rightly spell", it indicates the appreciation of beauty of nature.
- Literature of romance is majorly focused with the romanticize nature hence the correct choice of words to give point of interpretation in nature.
Question 2
Answer
C. The effort required to be a visionary
Explanation:
- Other phrase "Prophetic strain " show ability created by the visionary in literature.
- Literature which is to be considered beneficent should focus on envisage massage intended in creation of the visionary concern.
- It shows the struggle under which visionary literal work is brought into being.
Answer:
1. "It is a great Dead Place—greater than any Dead Place we know."
2. "Everywhere there are the ruins of the high towers of the gods."
Explanation:
Background or setting is the time and place of a tale, whether it be reality or fiction. As a literary element, it's a must. The location establishes the story's major backdrop and tone.
Passage:
It is not true what some of the tales say, that the ground there burns forever, for I have been there. Here and there were the marks and stains of the Great Burning, on the ruins, that is true. But they were old marks and old stains. It is not true either, what some of our priests say, that it is an island covered with fogs and enchantments. It is not. It is a great Dead Place—greater than any Dead Place we know. Everywhere in it there are god-roads, though most are cracked and broken. Everywhere there are the ruins of the high towers of the gods.
Correction!!! I read this over a few more times and I think it is the fourth one because it says "words that were once considered slang are now words of full, legitimate standing in our language." It's talking about the the past tense and present tense of slang. So sorry for the confusion