subject
English, 25.09.2020 22:01 vanessasantos2004vs

Total Score: of 20 points Read the passages given and answer the questions in complete sentences to identify the literary techniques used.
Passage: Again I say: it is a foolish question. The answer means nothing. And yet it is a question that has been asked so often—that has caused so much talk and doubt and misunderstanding—that I feel, after long thought, that the answer must be given. As will be clear, it is not for my own sake that I give it. Nor is it for Hillary’s. It is for the sake of Everest—the prestige of Everest—and for the generations who will come after us. “Why,” they will say, “should there be a mystery to this thing? Is there something to be ashamed of? To be hidden? Why can we not know the truth?”... Very well: now they will know the truth. Everest is too great, too precious, for anything but the truth.
(Score for Question 1: ___ of 2 points)
1. How is paradox used in this passage? Identify and explain it.
Type your answer here.
(Score for Question 2: ___ of 3 points)
2. What effect does using this literary technique have on the passage? Explain.
Type your answer here.
Passage: Beyond them, and around us on every side, were the great Himalayas, stretching away through Nepal and Tibet. For the closer peaks—giants like Lhotse, Nuptse and Makalu—you now had to look sharply downward to see their summits. And farther away, the whole sweep of the greatest range on earth—even Kanchenjunga itself—seemed only like little bumps under the spreading sky. It was such a sight as I had never seen before and would never see again: wild, wonderful and terrible. But terror was not what I felt. I loved the mountains too well for that. I loved Everest too well. At that great moment for which I had waited all my life my mountain did not seem to me a lifeless thing of rock and ice, but warm and friendly and living. She was a mother hen, and the other mountains were chicks under her wings. I too, I felt, had only to spread my own wings to cover and shelter the brood that I loved.
(Score for Question 3: ___ of 2 points)
3. How is paradox used in this passage? Identify and explain it.
Type your answer here.
(Score for Question 4: ___ of 2 points)
4. How is irony used in this passage? Identify and explain it.
Type your answer here.
(Score for Question 5: ___ of 6 points)
5. What effect does using these literary techniques have on the passage? Explain.
Type your answer here.
Passage: Also, he gives the impression that it was only he who really climbed it on his own, and that he then practically pulled me, so that I “finally collapsed exhausted at the top, like a giant fish when it has just been hauled from the sea after a terrible struggle.” Since then I have heard plenty about that “fish,” and I admit I do not like it.
(Score for Question 6: ___ of 2 points)
6. How is sarcasm used in this passage? Identify and explain it.
Type your answer here.
(Score for Question 7: ___ of 3 points)
7. What effect does using this literary device have on the passage? Explain.
Type your answer here.

ansver
Answers: 3

Another question on English

question
English, 21.06.2019 19:10
Read the passage from animal farm. one sunday morning squealer announced that the hens, who had just come in to lay again, must surrender their eggs. napoleon had accepted, through whymper, a contract for four hundred eggs a week. the price of these would pay for enough grain and meal to keep the farm going till summer came on and conditions were easier. when the hens heard this, they raised a terrible outcry. they had been warned earlier that this sacrifice might be necessary, but had not believed that it would really happen. they were just getting their clutches ready for the spring sitting, and they protested that to take the eggs away now was murder. for the first time since the expulsion of jones, there was something resembling a rebellion. led by three young black minorca pullets, the hens made a determined effort to thwart napoleon's wishes. their method was to fly up to the rafters and there lay their eggs, which smashed to pieces on the floor. napoleon acted swiftly and ruthlessly. he ordered the hens' rations to be stopped, and decreed that any animal giving so much as a grain of corn to a hen should be punished by death. the dogs saw to it that these orders were carried out. for five days the hens held out, then they capitulated and went back to their nesting boxes. nine hens had died in the meantime. their bodies were buried in the orchard, and it was given out that they had died of coccidiosis. whymper heard nothing of this affair, and the eggs were duly delivered, a grocer's van driving up to the farm once a week to take them away. which detail from the passage supports the claim that this is an allegory for the great purge? the hens holding out for five days but capitulating the eggs being delivered to the grocer the protesting hens being intentionally starved coccidiosis spreading on the farm
Answers: 1
question
English, 21.06.2019 23:40
Key events - what happens? what do we learn about the character in this event? or how does the event change the character? what is the author’s message in each set of events you have identified? 1.bruno and his family move from berlin to auschwitz due to the move he learns of the camp which leads to another key event. 2.bruno meets shmuel when they meet, they become friends which in turn towards the end leads to their untimely demise.
Answers: 1
question
English, 22.06.2019 00:20
Explain how advancements in technology have affected the diversity of our news, how we receive it, and how it is portrayed by the media.
Answers: 1
question
English, 22.06.2019 02:30
Create a purpose statement based on the graphic organizer in "section ii: finding the main point."
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
Total Score: of 20 points Read the passages given and answer the questions in complete sentences t...
Questions
question
Chemistry, 25.03.2021 23:40
question
Mathematics, 25.03.2021 23:40
question
Mathematics, 25.03.2021 23:40
Questions on the website: 13722363