English, 06.10.2019 03:30 Babycute8279
"will the dog bite me? " asked proserpina, fearing the three-headed dog. "what an ugly creature he is! " "o, never fear," answered her companion. "he never harms people, unless they try to enter my dominions without being sent for, or to get away when i wish to keep them here. down, cerberus! now, my pretty proserpina, we will drive on." given that proserpina will want to leave the palace freely, which type of irony is demonstrated in this dialogue?
a. dramatic
b. literal
c. situational
d. verbal
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 07:30
Write approximately 100 words reflecting on your 7-question reading strategy activity. how correct were your first two predictions? what questions worked for you within that activity? what questions didn't? were these reading strategies something you do unconsciously when you read anyway, or were they very foreign ideas? the more you know about how you read, the better you become as a reader. what did you learn about yourself as a reader?
Answers: 2
English, 22.06.2019 07:30
In what way was the modernist element of disillusionment shown in “the jitling of granny weatherall”? a) the story rejects traditional, chronological order. b) granny feels jilted at both her wedding and her deathbed. c) the narration makes heavy use of symbolism. d) granny’s thoughts are hard to distinguish from real events
Answers: 2
English, 22.06.2019 08:00
Read the poem. "there is no frigate like a book" (1263) by emily dickinson there is no frigate like a book to take us lands away, nor any coursers like a page of prancing poetry-- this traverse may the poorest take without oppress of toll-- how frugal is the chariot that bears the human soul. what is the primary metaphor in this poem? question 1 options: the reading experience is compared to taking a journey. a ship is compared to a book. a horse is compared to a page. a chariot is compared to a soul.
Answers: 1
"will the dog bite me? " asked proserpina, fearing the three-headed dog. "what an ugly creature he i...
Health, 10.02.2020 23:31
Mathematics, 10.02.2020 23:31
Physics, 10.02.2020 23:31
Mathematics, 10.02.2020 23:31
History, 10.02.2020 23:32
Mathematics, 10.02.2020 23:32
History, 10.02.2020 23:32
English, 10.02.2020 23:32