English, asked by ishan512, 10 months ago

how does twain use a idiom in this excerpt

Answers

Answered by EvA90
0
The correct answer would be option B. Based on the given excerpt above from Life on the Mississippi by Mark Twain, Twain uses an idiom in this excerpt to summarize the cumulative actions detailed in the sentence. An idiom is used to mean something different from its literal meaning.

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Answered by gratefuljarette
0

Twain uses an idiom to describe the increasing actions that are taking place in the town through this sentence.

Explanation:

  • These extracted lines from  Mark Twain’s ‘Life In the Mississippi’ depicts the picture of a town as it slowly wakes up to the daylight and how the various actions are going on in the town as it becomes busy.
  • A famous personal travel account of twain, ‘Life in the Mississippi’ shares his different experiences as a pilot of a steamboat in the Mississippi River. Here Twain uses an idiom of description to poetically describe the actions that are taking place one after the other in a cumulative manner.

Learn more about Life In the Mississippi

Complete these sentences from Mark Twain's Life on the Mississippi with words that are punctuated and spelled correctly.

https://brainly.in/question/6957352

What element in the excerpt from Life on the Mississippi most suggests that it is a realist text? It has dialogue that is both witty and believable. It contains well-rounded and diverse characters. It concerns itself with the trials of a daily occupation. It pays close attention to the physical details of a setting.

https://brainly.in/question/6414805

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