Answer:
A, B, and C all would be just situations for breaking the law.
Explanation:
D is so vague and vast that it isn't necessarily a reason for breaking the law. Laws like A, B, and C harm innocent people and therefore justify breaking them.
good luck:)
Answer: Zaroff has no conscience, while Rainsford does have a conscience.
Explanation: I’m assuming this is the Most Dangerous Game?
The General does not see his acts as murder.
Answer:
i tried to find some examples of figurative languages in the poem
here are some:
<em />
<em>husha-husha-hush</em> is onomatopoeia
hmm.. <em>slippery sand-paper </em>is alliteration
<em>Moan like an autumn wind high in the lonesome treetops</em> is simile
(and the two below it are also similes. similes compare two things using the word LIKE or AS)
<em>bang-bang & hoo-hoo-hoo-oo </em>is also onomatopoeia
Answer:
Charlotte is befriended along the way by the old black cook, Zachariah, who eventually helps save her life. When the vengeful captain accuses her of murder, Charlotte is tried and found guilty. She escapes punishment in a life-and-death struggle with Jaggery and is finally reunited with her family.
Charlotte tells Captain Jaggery he reminds her of her father. ... Captain Jaggery warns Charlotte that she may see him say or do things that seem cruel, but that punishments are necessary to maintain order on the ship. He shows her his gun cabinet, and tells her that these are the only guns on the ship.