<span>God hardens Pharaoh’s heart again to make him chase the Israelites. God will then save his people by parting the red sea for them to cross to the other side. God then rushes the water on the Egyptians and drowns them. In this way he makes himself glorified to the Israelites. God’s people will now see the power of the God who chose then. </span>
This question is incomplete; here´s the complete question.
Read Abalone, Abalone, Abalone, by Toshio Mori
Why does the author describe the extent to which the narrator is puzzled by mr. abe’s collecting?
Why does the author describe the extent to which the narrator is puzzled by Mr. Abe’s collecting?
A. To give insight into the narrator’s culture
B. To explain the narrator’s relationship with Mr. Abe
C. To establish the narrator as unreliable.
D. To make the narrator’s later shift in understanding more significant
Answer: D. To make the narrator’s later shift in understanding more significant
Explanation:
At first, the narrator highlights how much he´s intrigued about why would Mr. Abe keep collecting and polishing abalone shells since his front porch was practically full of them already. This initial mystery becomes more significant when the narrator finds an abalone shell, understands the reason for that practice, and starts a collection of his own.
Answer:
d.Oral language has more interjections.
Explanation:
Oral language has more interjections is an accurate statement about oral language.
We use oral language when we want to express our thoughts or ideas.
Also, oral means mouth, so we speak when we use oral language.
Answer:
A) the maintenance of political power. B) the public's view of the prince is often unrelated to the prince's actual virtues and vices. C) it is more important to appear morally good than to actually be morally good.
Explanation:
Niccolo Machiavelli was a political philosopher from the sixteenth century. He is the creator of "The Prince" which is unit of the first products of contemporary political philosophy and in this book, he prioritizes some thoughts like, the preservation of the political authority and some ways to manage it, that the public's opinion of the prince generally doesn't resemble with the actual character of the prince and that conditions express in politics.
Answer: His perseverance.
Explanation: By claiming his "heart [never] gave consent" he's trying to get the reader to notice he was not captivated by Calypso and instead always had his heart set on home.