English, asked by atharvgenius11, 10 months ago

the final exchange between holmes and watson in sir arthur conan doyle his last bow makes reference to a modern cliche what does that cliche mean?

Answers

Answered by Jasleen0599
0

Answer: The cliché here means some sort of agreement took place between the two parties.

Explanation:

The question is taken from the story His last bow which was firstly named as The War Service of Sherlock Holmes. The title name was renamed due to the ending of the story. The story is written by the writer Arthur Conan Doyle.

Answered by Haezel
1

Answer:

Here cliche refers to confirm or some sort of settlement

Firstly the story was named as “The War Service of Sherlock Holmes”, but later after the story found its finishing end it, the title has been changed to “His last bow”.

The story “His last bow” is written by the author Sir Arthur Conan Dyale. The story has been first published in the year 1917.

The narration of the story is been in the third person rather than the first person.

The story is related to the spy rather than a detective story.

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