The death of a loved one is a disaster that nature cannot heal.
Answer: A
Explanation
Nature will not heal that wound that is left after losing a loved one.
Even though nature creates fascinating patterns, it will not close the wound left.
However, time will be the determinant of the healing process.
This is because the effect of losing someone is eternal, and it is time that will heal the wounds.
Ultimately, nature will only create shorter healing, but once the one forgets about life, the injuries will be still fresh.
Therefore nature does not repair everything.
B. Is the answer because it’s about self-contradictory
Answer:
B. Hercules shows important character traits, such as strength and courage.
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Explanation:
4. D. Andy was shocked and horrified to hear the details of how Ann was killed and felt her loss more deeply.
5. C. “‘Hearing Conor,’ he said, ‘I made sounds I’ve never heard myself make. To hear that your daughter was on the floor saying ‘no’ and holding her hands up and still be shot is just — it’s just not...’ He tried to explain the horror of such knowledge, but it’s not easy.” ( Paragraph 92)
This evidence best proves the answer to question #4 and explains why #4 is correct. In option C, it specifically states Andy's reaction to Conor's account of Ann's murder. Listening to Conor tell about how Ann was on the floor and saying, "no" while she was helpless to stop him, horrified and shocked Andy. The narrator specifically says that the horror of the knowledge was hard for him to explain.
Answer:
To describe the most important ideas in Swift’s essay and explain his reason for writing.
Explanation:
This is the statement that best describes Swift's purpose for writing the essay "A Modest Proposal." In this text, Swift uses satire to describe a revolutionary, but most likely un popular idea: the fact that rich English people should buy poor Irish children in order to eat them. Swift argues that this will reduce the problem of poverty in Ireland. However, the text is a satire intended to criticize the way in which Irish people were abused by the English government.