Had to look for the missing options and here is my answer.
"The Pedestrian" is actually a short story that was written by <span>Ray Bradbury. And based on this story, the idea that most clearly shows that Mead is an atypical kind of person in his society is "his choice of walking for enjoyment". Hope this answer helps.</span>
Answer:
"need guts"
"so exposed"
"no way I had the courage"
Explanation:
Randa Abdel-Fattah's debut novel "Does My Head Look Big in This?" tells the story of a young Palestinian-Australian girl who is in a conflict between her traditional beliefs and her adoptive home of Australia. The story delves into the courageous girl's life, and how Muslim girls who are in a dilemma between maintaining their beliefs and trying to fit in with the Australian people can relate to her own experience.
In the given excerpt from the text, the speaker admits she did put on the hijab within the school's premises. But once out of that atmosphere, she would remove them in order to blend in with the common population. Certain words like<em> "need guts", "so exposed",</em> and <em>"no way I had the courage"</em> show how she feels intimidated, weak, or even unsure of keeping the hijab and be open about her religion and identity. The phrases show her insecurity over her true self and belonging. So, she'd instead remove the hijab and 'pretend' to be like a 'normal' Australian teen.
<span>"Why do you think Willie Mays was such a good baseball player?" is open-ended.</span>
<span>When Ralph discovered he held the winning ticket, an unexpected squeal exploded out of his mouth.</span>
Answer:
Autumn's golden reign- Personification
Rising radiance drives the shades away- Assonance
From star to star, the mental optics rove-Iambic Pentameter
Explanation:
The first excerpt is alluding a physical or human attribute to an inanimate object <u>which is saying that autumn has the human capacity to be on a golden reign.</u>
An assonance is the repetition of identical or similar two or more stress vowel sounds. This assonance takes place with the words "shade" and "away".
An iambic pentameter is a line of verse with five metric feet that is made up of one short and long syllable.
"From star to star, the mental optics rove" makes use of iambic pentameter because of the first unstressed syllable which is followed by the stressed syllable.