Ummm sorry to burst you bubble but where is the question to answer?
<span>In Doctor Faustus's obituary, you could include that he became a Doctor at the University of Wittenburg due to his intelligence, that he had already excelled in every subject (law, medicine, etc.) so he began to experiment with magic, and that he devoted his last days to giving a speech about his foolish pact with Lucifer, seemingly warning other scholars against his own faults. </span>
Answer:
Mikhail is using the web below to organize his ideas for his essay about the aftermath of the 1871 Chicago fire. One of his sources is The Great Fire by Jim Murphy. A circle is labeled Great Chicago Fire: The Aftermath. 3 circles are connected to this main circle. The first is labeled Restoring the city. The second is labeled Analyzing what happened. The third is labeled Individual stories. Which detail belongs in the individual stories area of the web? “Buildings that citizens viewed with great pride, such as the Courthouse, were gobbled up.” “White turned the wagon around and again headed south, his family and all of his servants safely onboard.” “The demand for carpenters and bricklayers soared, and farmers from as far away as 150 miles came to get jobs.” “As the days crept by, more and more people shook off their despondency and began to rebuild their homes and businesses.”
Your answer
Explanation:
Answer:
C). Beckett begins with the idea of endings.
Explanation:
'Endgame' by Samuel Beckett works upon the existentialist philosophy and belongs to the 'theater of absurd.' It is often considered as the follow up of Beckett's classic work 'Waiting for Godot.'
As per the question, <u>the play authorizes the idea of circularity as the play begins and ends on the same note i.e. 'intertwining of beginning and end</u>.' It is based upon the key idea of 'hopelessness' and the characters are endlessly waiting for 'nothing' but death. Clove internally feels 'he need to live' and plans of leaving but could not and goes back to the same situation(reflects absurdity and nothingness). Thus, the entire play moves around this very idea and hence, <u>option C</u> is the correct answer.
<span>Conclusions made on the basis of unstated or stated evidence are called inferences.
Those are some realizations that a person comes to based on proof which may or may not be obvious at the first glance. A reader may infer something on the basis of context or clues that can be found all over a text. The other options don't really make any sense here.
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