Answer:
yeah....
Explanation:
PART B: Which evidence from the text best supports the answer to Part A? A. “I have nothing else to give you” (Line 8) B. “I will answer, give you directions, / and let you warm yourself by this fire” (Lines 20-21) C. “I love you, / It’s all I have to give, / and all anyone needs to live” (Lines 23-25) D. “the world outside / no longer cares if you live or die” (Lines 27-28)
Though Buck is not a husky himself, does he take on any of their qualities? Using Jack London’s descriptions from his essay “Husky: Wolf-Dog of the North,” complete this prompt analyzing the shared traits between Buck and his wild counterparts, and how Buck is influenced by his new setting and surroundings. What do these shared traits tell you about some of the larger themes and ideas in London’s body of work? Your prompt should draw on a number of different quotations and examples (evidence) from both “Husky” and The Call of the Wild<span> to support your analysis.
Please mark me as brainliest.</span>
Answer:
Explanation:
Hobby for future
Hobby is a term referred to something that we do during our free time , but not many people know that hobbies can also be turned into a key for a better future .
When you keep on doing something you get better at it . For instance if your hobby is drawing and you do atleast one drawing a day then you will eventually get better at it . Just like that practise can make us achieve anything. But to get better at something doing only practise won't help , you should also try to get to the next level at it . For example if your hobby is drawing then the next level for you is oil pastel drawing , poster colour drawing then painting . Just that way improvements should be done . Studies are not the only way to achieve success . There are many ways , and one of them is doing our level best in the field we are interested.
Answer:
"The petrified man" by Eudora Welty uses grotesque imagery to establish the most significant themes through the characters of the story, there are two main characters and the whole story goes around the conversation between them, who in a very dark, twisted and unpleasant way criticize and diminish the life of others, pretending to be worrying about them and their whereabouts, all the people that are being cynically analyzed in this piece of work are the clients of Leota, a beautician, her and her customer, Mrs. Fletcher are representations of the most despicable "qualities" of the human beings, the sense of grotesque in the story is created in the atmosphere by the way these two characters interact and how they personalities seem to be built only over darker shades of selfishness, irony, and sarcasm. These characters feel that they are morally superior somehow, which gives them the right to scrutinize the clients' lives
Explanation:
"The petrified man" has not been considered as a beautiful piece of written work for many experts because of it's obscure and despicable nature. For other, the use of this technique represents something worthy of analysis and it in fact became a representative story of the darkness inside of the human soul.
Answer:
I agree with you that issue is best; it is a good parallel with problem.
A problem might be a subject for discussion, but we are not likely to say it is a subject for society.
It is difficult to see how a problem could be a theme for society. If there is a repeated or underlying subject of discussions we might call it a theme:
If there was an underlying theme it was this: "The problem is we don't have any money". (Source: Seattle Post Intelligencer (blog) - Mar 24, 2010)
Points are likely to be assertions, not questions to resolve, which is what problems are. We aren't likely to say "a point for our society today", unless we say what the society is to do with it. A person could say "[The fact that education is necessary for progress] is a point for our society to consider," although there would be better ways to express the idea.
Explanation: issue