English, asked by indumathymariappan20, 2 months ago

what is a sawdust ring . would the poem have been as interesting p if the poet had simply used the word instead of the phrase . sawdust ring ?

this question is from bag of tools lesson

Ans- Sawdust rings refers to the sawdust that is put up by the circus so as to make it easier to clean the mess after the animals. Clowns that caper in sawdust rings refers to the clowns that dance for the people and get covered in the sawdust as a result. This sentence is added to draw a comparison from princes and kings to common people. No, it would not have the same effect on the reader if the poet used the literal meaning of the word rather than the phrase.​

Answers

Answered by zameer74
2

Explanation:

what is a sawdust ring . would the poem have been as interesting p if the poet had simply used the word instead of the phrase . sawdust ring ?

this question is from bag of tools lesson

Ans- Sawdust rings refers to the sawdust that is put up by the circus so as to make it easier to clean the mess after the animals. Clowns that caper in sawdust rings refers to the clowns that dance for the people and get covered in the sawdust as a result. This sentence is added to draw a comparison from princes and kings to common people. No, it would not have the same effect on the reader if the poet used the literal meaning of the word rather than the phrase.

Answered by Z69
0

1.1 f(1)=3 and f(a+h)=a2+2ah+h2−3a−3h+5

1.2 Domain = {x|x≤2}, range = {y|y≥5}

1.3 x=0,2,3

1.4 (fg)(x)=x2+32x−5. The domain is {x|x≠52}.

1.5 (f∘g)(x)=2−5x−−√.

1.6 (g∘f)(x)=0.63x

1.7 f(x) is odd.

1.8 Domain = (−∞,∞), range = {y|y≥−4}.

1.9 m=1/2. The point-slope form is y−4=12(x−1). The slope-intercept form is y=12x+72.

1.10 The zeros are x=1±3–√/3. The parabola opens upward.

1.11 The domain is the set of real numbers x such that x≠1/2. The range is the set {y|y≠5/2}.

1.12 The domain of f is (−∞, ∞). The domain of g is {x|x≥1/5}.

1.13 Algebraic

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