The Victorian social Code has always given major imprtance to social ranking on The imprtance of being earnest. take a look on this expression to see the division of classes highlghted by the Victorians: <span>Really, if the lower orders don't set us a good example, what on earth is the use of them?"</span>
<u>Electronic calendar</u> is the type of technology tools can you use in place of traditional calendars.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Traditional calendars help us to get the information about day, date and various festivals. But nowadays there are various other substitute of traditional calendar such as phones, pc/laptop etc.
With the ever increasing technology, electronic calendars are the new part of everyone’s day to day life.
Electronic calendars provide us with innumerable information compare to that of traditional calendar. Let's take an example of a phone. If there is an essay we need to write in school, and the topic is of festival.
We will be getting information only the date of festival in traditional calendar. Whereas if we search on electronic calendar, we can even find the purpose of that festival thus helping us academically.
Answer:
This technique benefits me as a learner as it helps me to visualise my method and approach to solving a problem before I go about solving it. This is pertinent especially in problem based subjects like mathematics. In learning, this is also helpful in helping me to internalise the information gathered, for example, being able to mentally link the information together on a concept map in your head or on paper also helps in retaining information. This concept of visualisation and categorisation is similar to the thinking process of computational thinking which involves breaking down the problem and solving it abstractly.
I do not agree that this only works for visual learners. While visual learners tend to be more inclined to this method of processing in their minds or on paper, I feel that everyone uses this method to a certain extent although through a different methodology or thought process.
Explanation:
Sonnet VII by Francesco Petrarch Italian encouragement to a friend to pursue poetry the speaker’s friend uses personification to represent the baseness of people
"Whoso List to Hunt" by Thomas Wyatt Italian the poet's unrequited love for a woman all those who intend to pursue the woman they love uses the metaphor of hunting deer to express the impossibility of pursuing a woman who belongs to someone else
Sonnet 75 from Amoretti by Edmund Spenser English the immortality of love the speaker’s mistress uses the image of rushing waves wiping the sand clean to emphasize the idea of temporality
Sonnet 16 from Astrophil and Stella by Sir Philip Sidney English a lover's pain and the poet's personal experience of it no one in particular compares beauty to jewels; compares physical attraction to boiling fluid and the restless yearning for love to restless flames; uses the metaphor of a young lion to portray the vigour and strength of love
Sonnet 130 by William Shakespeare English the poet's love for his mistress no one in particular parodies the hyperboles used by earlier poets in describing their lovers