Answer: His perseverance.
Explanation: By claiming his "heart [never] gave consent" he's trying to get the reader to notice he was not captivated by Calypso and instead always had his heart set on home.
Answer:
Socio-cultural theory of cognitive development.
Explanation: The Russian psychologist Vygotsky's theory is a milestone and the basis of constructivism. He felt that social learning precedes development. He explains that "every function in child's cultural development occurs twice, firstly, on social level(interpsychological) and secondly, on individual level"(intrapsychological). Thus, when Xavier modifies the poetic techniques he is reflecting Vygotsky's instructional principle of cognitive development according to which child constructs knowledge actively. He says cognition and consciousness are the by-products of socialization.
This text reflects the passage as a whole when the narrator illustrates anger at the woman by avoiding names. Through the use of parallelism, clear order, and repetition, coherence and unity are both successfully attained in “Was it a Dream?”. The story’s theme shows blind flattery to someone wherein the glorification of their image from ignorance results in the loss of truth.
Answer:
b
Explanation:
it just looks like the better answer
Answer:
- It is expected that the store will attract shoppers from the surrounding area.
- This may help the economy of Mansfield
- The store is described as a 'Paradise for Shoppers' and Extra Value Foods believe that it will revolutionise shopping in the area.
Explanation:
Some parts of the excerpt are facts, or have been decided to happen in the future. So they are not opinions but facts, such as, <em>plans to open a new ..... </em>, <em>has been suffering from</em> ...... , <em>the completions date</em>...... , <em>and opening hours......</em>
Other sentences are either writer's opinions or food retailer's wishes/targets (they too are categorized as opinion).
The first, second and third sentences (selected in the answer part) show writer's/retailer's opinions and expectations which may turn out to be true or false in the future.