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Related Questions

Whose grave does the speaker pass in Emily Dickinson's poem 712?

Her own


Who does the speaker suspect is digging on her grave?

the dog.


In whose grave was a silk banner found?

lady from dai


Does the grave voice in the poem agree with the speaker's bleak image of the African people?

yes, it does


In the song whose body lies smoldering in the grave?

John Brown.


Whose grave is on top of beacon hill highclere?

Lord Carnarvons grave is at the top of beacon hill right beside his beloved house Highclere castle


Whose grave did tom sawyer sit near in the woods?

the kid that drowned last year


Whose grave did Tom sit near in the woods in tom sawyer?

a man named Hoss Williams.


Whose ring was on john teller grave when jax put his on it?

jax put it there before he left the us


In The Good the Bad and the Ugly whose grave was the gold hidden in?

It was in an unmarked grave. Clint Eastwood's character "Blondie" said he was writing the name of the grave on the bottom of a rock, then, after the three way shoot out it was revealed to Tuco that there was no name on the rock, because the gold was buried in an unmarked grave. When the gold was found the grave marker was simply a piece of unmarked wood.


Why is Ah AreYou Digging Up My Grave ironic?

The title "Ah Are You Digging Up My Grave" is ironic because it implies that the speaker is mocking or questioning someone for digging up their grave, yet the poem reveals that the speaker is actually grateful for being remembered and mourned by the living. This contrast between the title and the content of the poem creates irony.


What is 'grave' in Italian?

Tomba is an Italian equivalent of 'grave' in the sense of a place of burial. It's pronounced 'TOHM-bah'. It's a feminine gender noun whose definite article is 'la' ['the'] and whose indefinite article is 'una' ['a, one'].Grave or Serio may be equivalents, in the sense of the adjective that means 'serious'. They're pronounced 'GRAH-vay' and 'SEH-ree-oh', respectively. There's just the one form of the adjective 'grave' for a 'grave, serious' female or male. But the feminine equivalent of 'serio' is 'seria', which is pronounced 'SEH-ree-ah'.