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AP English Language and Composition 6.6 Passage Drill 207 Views
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Description:
AP English Language and Composition 6.6 Passage Drill. With what does the author contrast "Mechanical Art"?
Transcript
- 00:00
Edited at https://subtitletools.com
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by urns.
- 00:07
They're all Grecian to us. [A cardboard with a smile hangs over the Monalisa painting]
- 00:09
Yeah. We went there.
Full Transcript
- 00:11
All right, here's the poem. Read it. Weep. [Passage appears on screen]
- 00:16
The word "overwrought" in line 42 acts as which of the following?
- 00:21
And here are the potential answers.
- 00:24
All right, so we need to look at line 42 and determine
- 00:27
what the word "overwrought" is doing there.
- 00:29
First, it'd be good to know what the word means in the first place. [The question along with options appears on the screen]
- 00:33
It looks like "overweight," but we somehow doubt the writer's
- 00:36
talking about portly maidens here. [Yin and yang sign spins on the screen]
- 00:38
Uh, you know, the urn is only so big.
- 00:40
The "over" prefix generally accentuates the word it's attached to, [Smiling angel and devil appears on the screen]
- 00:44
so "overwrought" means very... something.
- 00:47
We've probably seen the word "wrought" in "wrought iron," [Juicer splatters juice on canvas and creates a painting]
- 00:50
which is iron that's been beaten and shaped.
- 00:52
Well, basically, it's been through the ringer.
- 00:54
Ding.
- 00:55
So if the word "overwrought" is assigned to a person,
- 00:58
it's saying something like, [A train transforms into a robot]
- 01:00
"that person is very agitated or stressed out."
- 01:05
But is that what it means here?
- 01:07
Or are they trying to pull one over on us? [Smelter & forge and steam engine appears besides author]
- 01:09
If we look at line 42,
- 01:11
"Of marble men and maidens overwrought,"
- 01:14
we could be talking about men and maidens who are stressed out.
- 01:17
They certainly don't appear to have much hair left.
- 01:20
But look at the next line,
- 01:22
"With forest branches and the trodden weed;". [Authors waves from a train engine]
- 01:26
So these maidens are overwrought with [Angry author throws skeleton from train]
- 01:28
forest branches and weeds.
- 01:30
In other words, they're overdecorated with their various [Robot kicks skeleton]
- 01:33
twigs and whatnot.
- 01:35
Either way, it's definitely an adjective and not a verb,
- 01:37
so we can nix options D and E for sure.
- 01:41
And we already established that it's the men and maidens the word is describing, [The author angrily points to skeleton and hugs train engine]
- 01:44
so it looks like B is our answer.
- 01:47
So, yeah, apparently people liked to dress in shrubbery back then.
- 01:51
There's no accounting for taste. [Two hands hold together]
- 01:52
[ say what? ]
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AP English Language and Composition: Passage Drill Drill 1, Problem 2. What is the speaker's primary purpose in using onomatopoeia in line four?
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