This is an example of mixing "high" and "low" art. Comic books are concerned a lower art form than postmodern art, so mixing the two is done when they are integrated. This is just one example of that kind of mixing.
using mechanical reproduction to question the nature of art and artistic creation itself.
personification
AS, far as I know, they will just send you in a school , if its really necessary, example is a language school or more likely an International school :)
I think that Rosetta Stone is the same as all other language programs out there, like Baron's, for example. I have tried many language learning programs, but I think Rosetta Stone is by far the best out there. It may be expensive, but it is worth it in the end! :)
Livy
Yes
Onomatopoeia is a word that imitates the natural sound of a thing or action it describes. For example, "buzz" imitates the sound of a bee, or "splash" imitates the sound of something hitting water.
A detective novel featuring a straightforward linear plot and traditional storytelling techniques would not be an example of metafiction breaking the fourth wall or self-referential writing commonly found in postmodern writing.
When a postmodern writer or the story's narrator begins to directly address the reader it is an example of metafiction, where the narrator intentionally exposes himself or herself as the author of the story.
Yes, grumble is an example of onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound it represents.
Yes, "spray" is an example of onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound that spraying makes.
Words for animal sounds are an example of onomatopoeia because they mimic the actual sounds made by the animals. For example, "meow" imitates the sound a cat makes, while "oink" imitates the sound a pig makes. The words themselves sound like the noises they are describing.
An example of onomatopoeia is the word "buzz" because it imitates the sound of something vibrating or humming.
Yes, onomatopoeia is an example of itself because the word's sound imitates the sound it represents.
Yes, "flick" is an example of an onomatopoeia because it imitates the sound that it represents.
using mechanical reproduction to question the nature of art and artistic creation itself.
alliteration. They have the same cosanant sound in the middle