The way people speak tells us this person. Tom Leonard's "Unrelated Event" and Sugarbabat's "Search My Tongue" are two poems that will allow people to urge others to see through their way of speaking. "Unrelated events" are the way BBC news readers speak in standard English, Scots do not read the news. Because viewers do not understand these accents. Attitude is in his poem.
Sujata Bhatt, a hurricane from Grace Nichols, and Sujata Bhatt, a gift from Moniza Alzi's "Find My Tongue" are looking for my tongue. Experience. This poem shows how you feel like losing your mother tongue when you speak a foreign language you live in, but in her dream it came back. - Moniza Alvi and my aunt in Pakistan and Sujata Bhatt are comparing the two poems searching for my tongue This article shows how writers use their own poetry device for their work . How to use various themes to your poem to overcome. To start this article, I will introduce you how Alvi and Bhatt use different perspectives in their poetry to communicate their message to the readers.
The way people speak tells us this person. Tom Leonard's "Unrelated Event" and Sugarbabat's "Search My Tongue" are two poems that will allow people to urge others to see through their way of speaking. - The story of Mary E. Wilkins "Mother's Uprising" depicts a woman (Sarah Penn), often forfeited by her husband (Adonriam Penn) to join an important decision until the settlement eventually leads to a sharp family I will change it. In contrast, a similar contradiction also occurred in Joseph Leuven's film "Alliance with enemies" (1991). In the movie, hero Laura Barney has everything she needs in her mind.
When comparing "Find My Tongue" of Sujata Bhatt and "Ogun" of Edward Kamau, Sujata Bhatt's "Find My Tongue" and Edward Kamau Brathwaite's "Ogun" are the concept of culture and identity, - Search my culture and identity from Pakistan's aunt to find my tongue and gifts In my article my aim is to show how culture and identity are shown in "Search my tongue" and "My gift" The first poetry of Pakistan's aunt 'Find my tongue' was written by a woman named Sujata Bhatt born in 1956 in Ahmedabad, India. She entered the country in 1986. To the United States