Two words creating an admiring tone are prettiest and kindest.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Jane Eyre is the tale of a youthful, stranded young lady (amazingly, she's named Jane Eyre) who lives with her auntie and cousins, the Reeds, at Gateshead Hall. Jane is excited to have discovered a family finally, and she chooses to separate her legacy between her cousins and herself equitably so they each will acquire 5,000 pounds.
The fundamental clash in Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Bronte, encompasses Jane's endeavors to accommodate the world that regularly has no qualities to the code of qualities by which she carries on with her life.
Since there is no underlined portion we aren’t able to answer the question. Sorry
Answer:
identify and evaluate the consequences
Explanation:
"Will Kimi accept her friend's invitation to use drugs?"
This is a yes or no question, but the decision making process is not.
She already knows the problem and there are not options available for this besides yes or no. There's nothing about her friend's decision for her to evaluate because it's about her and her health, no her friend's. So in the end, she has to know what will happen to her health once she decides to go along with it. Is it worth doing?
Answer:it's intransitive Explanation:
The correct answer is C. As it is known, Kafka did not have a good relationship with his father, as he was abusive with him. Kafka’s father was also a narcissistic man and he did not care about his son and this can be proved in “Letter to His Father”. “The Metamorphosis” can be perceived as a sample of the solace that Kafka did in order to expel his demons against his father and so is “Letter to His Father”. After Gregor becomes a bug, he can not longer communicate with his father and this a representation of what Kafka felt inside him with his own father since his father intransigent with him.
Option A is not correct as the confusion of Gregor Samsa does not have anything to do with the fact that he converted into a bug, so it would not make sense since it does not have a direct connection with Kafka’s relationship with his father.
Option B is not correct as the pain that Gregor feels inside of him is not the consequence of the bad relationship that Kafka had with this father. The fact that he is unable to go off the bed in order to continue with his life is something that is not connected with the fact that Kafka and his father did not have a good father and son relationship.
Option D is not correct since Gregor knows perfectly why his sister did not want to go inside his room with their parents as she has become a different person since Gregor converted into a bug. She does not want to see him because he is now a disgusting and bizarre creature; he is not her brother anymore. Although Gregor was a good brother with her, and supported her with her studies, it seems she has forgotten about that. Nonetheless, the relationship between Gregor and her sister does not represent any aspect in “Letter to His Father”.