Answer: C. sat always at my right hand.
Explanation:
Robinson Crusoe is the protagonist of Daniel Defoe's novel of the same name (1719).
In this particular excerpt, Crusoe describes his pets and their habits. His parrot Poll is the only one who talks to him, his dog always sits at his right hand, and the two cats sit on the two opposite sides of the table. The way he talks about his pets indicates that he is preoccupied with mastery. This is evident because his dog is always beside him, which is Crusoe's way to establish authority and have everything under control. He is the dog's master, and the dog must obey him.
The first in the outline after the title in a report is A) An executive summary
An executive summary is a short and concise version of the full report so that readers can become familiar with the information provides in the full material in general aspects without having o real all of it.
The other points are included in the report but in further parts of it
B is the answer for which of these details is an anecdote
Anthropomorphism<span> is the attribution of </span>human<span> traits, </span>emotions, and intentions to non-human entities <span>and is considered to be an innate tendency of </span><span>human psychology. </span>
Literature and the Holocaust have a complicated relationship. This isn't to say, of course, that the pairing isn't a fruitful one—the Holocaust has influenced, if not defined, nearly every Jewish writer since, from Saul Bellow to Jonathan Safran Foer, and many non-Jews besides, like W.G. Sebald and Jorge Semprun. Still, literature qua art—innately concerned with representation and appropriation—seemingly stands opposed to the immutability of the Holocaust and our oversized obligations to its memory. Good literature makes artistic demands, flexes and contorts narratives, resists limpid morality, compromises reality's details. Regarding the Holocaust, this seems unconscionable, even blasphemous. The horrors of Auschwitz and Buchenwald need no artistic amplification.