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Pebbles
something you do over an over and over and over .......... again
0.076923076923076923076923076923076 ... The digits 076923 repeat over and over.0.076923076923076923076923076923076 ... The digits 076923 repeat over and over.0.076923076923076923076923076923076 ... The digits 076923 repeat over and over.0.076923076923076923076923076923076 ... The digits 076923 repeat over and over.
12 over 11
1 over 2 or... 2 over 4 or... 3 over 6 or... 4 over 8 or... 526 over 1052 or... 9 over 18
Yes, "over the cobbles he clattered and clashed" is an example of identification, as it vividly conveys the sound and movement of someone riding or traversing over cobblestone streets. The use of onomatopoeia with "clattered" and "clashed" helps the reader visualize and hear the scene, creating a strong sensory experience. This identification immerses the audience in the environment and evokes a specific atmosphere.
Yes, both "clattered" and "clashed" are examples of onomatopoeia. They imitate the sounds that they describe, with "clattered" suggesting a chaotic, rattling noise and "clashed" suggesting a sharp, metallic sound.
Yes, as they describe an action. A verb is basically A word used to describe an action, state, or occurrence, and forming the main part of the predicate of a sentence
The shutters of the shop clattered when the strong wind blew.
No.
The past tense of clatter is clattered.
Yes.
Metaphor - "The wind was a torrent of darkness" Alliteration - "cobbles, clattered, creaked" Onomatopoeia - "creaked" Simile - "his hair like mouldy hay" Personification - "There was Death at every window"
On the Cobbles was created on 2004-04-26.
In: Silvio Berlusconi
The teacher had a sense of cobbles when she saw a student copying off another.
they clashed over monetary issues, and over the foreign policy.