Question 7 of 10
1 Point
Which best explains what leading means in a poem?
A. Providi...
Question 7 of 10
1 Point
Which best explains what leading means in a poem?
A. Providing the reader with few clues about connections between
ideas
B. Choosing words that all come from the same origin language
C. Writing lines that all connect back to a single, central image
D. Including words that guide the reader to make certain connections
Answers: 3
English, 21.06.2019 13:50, VanssaNedina20
Published in 1849, by was inspired by the writer's experience of being arrested when he refused to pay a $1 poll tax as a protest against the mexican-american war.
Answers: 2
English, 22.06.2019 00:30, ira51
The story line remains the same. the kids live in what was then one of the remaining beachfront slums, down the coast from the expensive malibu area. the beach was ruled by surfers, but in the afternoon, when the waves died down, some of the surfers, or their younger brothers, fooled around on skateboards. one day, skip engblom, the shop owner, comes up with a key breakthrough, polyurethane wheels: "they grip." with the additional traction, the z-boys try skating the sides of the big, open drainage canal that runs through the area. then comes a brainstorm: because of a drought, the area's swimming pools were drained. the kids started "borrowing" pools when the owners weren't home, to skate the curved sides.” where did “the lords of dogtown” originally practice their tricks? a. the beach c. an open drainage canal b. empty pools d. none of these
Answers: 3
English, 22.06.2019 02:00, cmikell124
Wi n t e r acrostic poem worth 10 points but giving 30
Answers: 2
English, 22.06.2019 03:10, dropnsocks8315
What mainly does the text identify as one of alexander pope’s greatest achievements? question 1 options: a) reforming the government to be democratic b) giving art its due importance in europe c) making literature accessible to all d) translating homer’s epics
Answers: 1
English, 23.04.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 23.04.2021 20:30
Mathematics, 23.04.2021 20:30
History, 23.04.2021 20:30
Social Studies, 23.04.2021 20:30