Where is the irony in the play "fail not our feast" by vincent godefroy?

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: The irony is written in the Phrase 3 given in the question.

Irony is a discrepancy or an incongruence between what is anticipated and to what it actually is. There are three types of irony. One would be verbal irony which, as the name suggests, revolves around speaking or what is said. The other two would be dramatic irony and situation irony. Dramatic irony is usually used in plays, dramas, and the like that involves the audience's awareness. Situation irony would be more involved with what's happening around.

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Correct the sentence Richard gave me won of his extra-rotten weasel-eyed green-toothed grin

Answers

Richard gave me one of his extra-rotten weasel-eyed green-toothed grins.

Hope this helps!

What is the correct definition of a motif

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The correct definition of motif is a recurring subject, theme. idea, etc.
Deisgn or pattern maybe if I'm right

In Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ozymandias," what effect is created by the poet's use of phrases like "antique land," "shattered visage," and "ye Mighty"? A.
They instill the poem with a sense of futility and hopelessness.

B.
They instill the poem with a feeling of the vastness of the desert.

C.
They instill the poem with a sense of age and long periods of time past.

D.
They instill the poem with the speaker's great admiration for the king.

Answers

In Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ozymandias," what effect is created by the poet's use of phrases like "antique land," "shattered visage," and "ye Mighty"?

The answer is letter A. 
They instill the poem with a sense of futility and hopelessness.

How do you spell weiner

Answers


In many cases, you can't nail down the spelling of a word without knowing
what it means.

You didn't tell us what your word means, so there are different possibilities. 
Here are a few:

-- In old German, a wagon driver was a wagner (VOG-nair) or weiner(VEIN-air).
As the Yiddish language (spoken among German Jews) developed from old high
German, some of them used the same word 'weiner' to mean 'one who makes or
sells wine'.  The word came to the New World as a family name, spelled "Viner",
(as in my first high school crush).

-- The ancient city of Vienna, now the capital of modern Austria, is called "Wien"
(VEEN) in the languages around there.  A person who was born or raised there
is called a Wiener (VEEN-air).  Also, a small sausage that became popular there
was also called a Wiener. That's where we got the slang term 'weener' for a hot
dog or anything that resembles one.

-- A little kid who whimpers and whines all the time is called a whiner.

So the spelling really often depends on what your word means.  That's one
reason why, in a spelling bee, they always give you a sentence along with
the word.


Which is an implied or indirect reference found in literature?A. a point of view B. a themeC. an allusionD. a symbol

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The correct answer is C. an allusion.


When you refer to something in a particular text that doesn't actually appear in that text, or when you imply the reference to something, it means that you are alluding to that particular something - you are making an allusion to that. Point of view is just about who tells the story; theme is the topic of the story; a symbol is the metaphorical way to refer to something in a story, but not an actual reference.

Allusion. This literary device is used to form a connection between the current literature with something else.

Our earliest sources of tragedy and comedy date from ____ times.

Answers

Answer:

Ancient Greek times.

Explanation:

Drama —what is now considered both tragedies and comedies— was developed in Ancient Greece as part  of fascinating rituals dedicated to the god Dionysus, and later incorporating elements pertaining to the god Apollo. It reached its highest perfection during the 5th century BC with the tragedies of the three most notable Greek playwrights: Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. The most memorable of Greek comedians is Aristophanes.  

the greek times when they whear to try to please dionyses