The group of friends do not think they can finish painting the stars before terry returns.
Answer:
At the start of the book, Gregor Samsa might have turned into such an insect but it's clear when you pass thru the entirety of the series that the rest of his won't alter. Whenever anything and someone is going via a transformation, there must be an abrupt difference not just in physical attributes as well as from within.
Gregor may also have altered but he somehow decided to work and provide the food and money he required for his relatives. He realised that his family had been able to fend for themselves in his death as an insect since they can no longer rely on him to continue providing their wants.
A foil is the near complete opposite of the main character (whichever character they want you to find a foil for).
Rainsford and Whitney were good hunting friends with numerous similar interests. They could not be foils because of how close in similarity they were. Even when they disagreed on how animals felt about being hunted, Whitney seemed open to and intrigued by Rainsford's points and way of thinking.
Ivan is a near irrelevant character, being a mere Cossack who follows whatever General Zaroff says. He is mindless and has almost zero traits to even compare to Rainsford, let alone any traits aside from a mindless follower to begin with.
The answer would be General Zaroff. This is almost like the cliche protagonist vs antagonist foil. Both of them are hunters, but different kinds. Zaroff got bored with animals and wanted to hunt human people instead, whereas Rainsford had enjoyed the thrill of an animal hunt and thinks that the hunting of people is murder. Zaroff is more heartless and cold, a killer, if you will. Rainsford seems to think highly of actual people, and had no interest in playing Zaroff's game.
The correct answer is (D). In the poem “Lochinvar” by Sir
Walter Scott the Lochinvar's offering to dance with Ellen on her wedding day is crucial for the outcome of the
poem. On the day of Ellen’s wedding Lochinvar came to see Ellen again and have
a chance to be with her. Lochinvar asks her for the dance and while they are
dancing he proposes to her to run away with him and she accepts: “One touch to
her hand, and one word in her ear,/When they reach’d the hall-door, and the
charger stood near; /So light to the croupe the fair lady he swung, /So light
to the saddle before her he sprung!”
The answer is A due to the fact that the Navajo didn't reject the idea of education, it isn't speaking about removal from homes or boarding schools, and the conflict isn't mentioned within this excerpt.