It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question so I had to look for it. Anyway, here is the answer. According to "Introduction to Cultural Rebellion: Mid-Twentieth-Century Voices," what motivated both science fiction and beat generation authors in the United States after World War II is the <span>disillusionment with modern society. Hope this helps.</span>
Widow Whycherly - Vanity
Mr.Medbourne - greed
Colonel - lust
Mr.Gascoigne- pompousness
i think this is right
<u>Answer</u>:
(B) “Brutus cares about all Romans” And (E) “Brutus does not know how Caesar will change”.
These statements support the inference that Brutus is motivated to protect Rome from tyranny.
<u>Explanation</u>:
'Julius Caesar' by “William Shakespeare” is a story about how Roman Republic came to an end.
“Julius Caesar” was a great Roman 'general' and 'senator'. His good friend, “Brutus” loved Rome more than he loved his dear friend, Caesar. So, his enemies even manipulated him to believe that Caesar might misuse his powers and planned to kill him to preserve the "Republic".
Brutus strongly believed that Caesar's death will benefit Rome. He is thus confused between supporting Caesar and Rome and is the “tragic hero” of the play.
Answer:
The city council has successfully voted to build
the new bridge we’ve all been clamouring for - joy
The city council has voted to build a new bridge,
regrettably eliminating any possibility of having
our beloved town carnival this year -sadness
The city council has for some reason voted to
spend all of our hard-earned tax dollars on a
bridge -anger
The city council has made the shocking decision
to build a bridge that probably will not be safe
for us to drive on -fear
Explanation:
The sentence that is joyful has the phrase "clamouring for", which gives off the feeling of excitement.
The sad sentence has the word "regrettably", which is connected to sadness.
The angry one has the phrase "for some reason" that feels very passive aggressive.
The fearful one has the phrase "shocking" and "probably will not be safe for us to drive on", the writer seems fearful of the construction.