Assonance:
A. A situation that appears to be contradictory but after a closer look tums out to be true, or at least make sense.
B. The use of words to create sensory descriptions.
C. The repetition of vowel sounds in a series of words.
D. The attitude of the speaker.
E. Modern poetry.
F. A type of irony in which a person appears to be praising something but is actually insulting it or visa versa.
G. The repetition of beginning consonant sounds.
H. Poetry with high literary merit that is considered important for students to know.
I. When a situation turns out differently than one would normally expect.
J. The ordering of words in a particular pattern.
K. A form of personification in which an absent or dead person is spoken to as if present.
L. The repetition of sounds to produce a harmonious effect.
M. A direct comparison of two things without using like or as.
N. A kind of metaphor that gives human characteristics. to inanimate objects.
O. The character a writer assumes.
P. A literary reference to something else
Q. Poetry that tells a story.
R. The running on of one line of poetry into another.
S. Expresses the thoughts and feelings of the poet
T. Word choice.
U. A deliberate, outrageous exaggeration.
V. A form of paradox that combines a pair of contrary terms into a single expression.
W. The use of words in which the sounds seem to resemble the sounds they describe.
X. The opposite of hyperbole.
Y. The "sound" or style of the narrator.
Z. the use of one object to suggest another hidden object or idea.
AA. A play on words.
BB. A comparison of two different things using like or as
Answers: 1
English, 21.06.2019 22:00, nelsoneligwe7
Read this passage from william faulkner's the sound and the fury: i says no i never had university advantages because at harvard they teach you how to go for a swim at night without knowing how to swim and at sewanee they dont even teach you what water is. i says you might send me to the state university; maybe i'll learn how to stop my clock with a nose spray and then you can send ben to the navy i says or to the cavalry anyway, they use geldings in the cavalry. which best describes the narrator's tone in this passage? a. bitter b. angry c. sarcastic d. all of the above
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 00:00, dbenitezmontoya3
Time is not always change. time can also mean continuity, and it can mean keeping acknowledged truths in mind despite differences in circumstances. there is no better example of this in things fall apart than the retellings of the proverb about the bird named eneke, the language in both retellings is almost identical despite the length of time that has passed between their repetitions. in comparing the usages of the same proverb, achebe allows his readers to note the similarities and differences between the situations, and he them understand how this story can be applied to their own lives.
Answers: 3
Assonance:
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