Answer: 4 is not right, I'd say 5.
Explanation:
Dionysius, the ruler of Syracuse, grew annoyed when he heard about the kind of speeches Pythias was giving. The young scholar was telling the public that no man should have unlimited power over another and that absolute tyrants were unjust kings. In a fit of rage, Dionysius summoned Pythias and his friend.
“Who do you think you are, spreading unrest among the people?” he demanded.
“I spread only the truth,” Pythias answered. “There can be nothing wrong with that.”
“And does your truth hold that kings have too much power and that their laws are not good for their subjects?”
“If a king has seized power without permission of the people, then that is what I say.”
“This kind of talk is treason,” Dionysius shouted. “You are conspiring to overthrow me. Retract what you’ve said, or face the consequences.”
“I will retract nothing,” Pythias answered.
“Then you will die. Do you have any last requests?”
“Yes. Let me go home just long enough to say goodbye to my wife and children and to put my household in order.”
“I see you not only think I’m unjust, you think I’m stupid as well,” Dionysius laughed scornfully. “If I let you leave Syracuse, I have no doubt I will never see you again.”
“I will give you a pledge,” Pythias said.
“He will keep his word,” Damon replied. “I have no doubt of that.”
“What kind of pledge could you possibly give to make me think you will ever return?” Dionysius demanded.
At that instant Damon, who had stood quietly beside his friend, stepped forward.
“I will be his pledge,” he said. “Keep me here in Syracuse, as your prisoner until Pythias returns. Our frienship is well known to you. You can be sure Pythias will return so long as you hold me.”
Dionysius studied the two friends silently. “Very well,” he said at last. “But if you are willing to take the plce of your friend, you must be willing to accept his sentence if he breaks his promise. If Pythias does not return to Syracuse, you will die in his place.”
Pythias was allowed to go free for a time, and Damon was thrown into prison. After several days, when Pythias failed to reappear, Dionysius’s curiosity got the better of him, and he went to the prison to see if Damon was yet sorry he had made such a bargain.
“Your time is almost up,” the ruler of Syracuse sneered. “It will be useless to beg for mercy. You were a fool to rely on your friend’s promise. Did you really think he would sacrifice his life for you or anyone else?
“He has merely been delayed,” Damon answered steadily. “The winds have kept him from sailing, or perhaps he has met with some accident on the road. But if it is humanly possible, he will be here on time. I am as confident of his virtue as I am of my own existence.”
Dionysius was startled at the prisoner’s confidence. “We shall soon see,” he said and left Damon in his cell.
The fatal day arrived. Damon was brought from prison and led before the executioner. Dionysius greeted him with a smug smile.
“It seems your friend has not turned up,” he laughed. “What do you think of him now?”
“He is my friend,” Damon answered. “I trust him.”
Even as he spoke, the doors flew open, and Pythias staggered into the room. He was pale and bruised and half speechless from exhaustion. He rushed to the arms of his friend.
“You are safe, praise the gods,” he gasped. “It seemed as though the fates were conspiring against us. My ship was wrecked in a storm, and then bandits attacked me on the road. But I refused to give up hope, and at last I’ve made it back in time. I am ready to receive my sentence of death.”
Dionysius heard his words with astonishment. His eyes and his heart were opened. It was impossible for him to resist the power of such constancy.
“The sentence is revoked,” he declared. “I never believed that such faith and loyalty could exist in friendship. You have shown me how wrong I was, and it is only right that you be rewarded with your freedom. But I ask that in return you do me one great service.”
“What service do you mean?” the friends asked.
“Teach me how to be part of so worthy a friendship.”
The first paragraph of this story mostly provides the reader with __________.
a. the crisis or turning point in the story
b. the specific obstacles the characters will face
c. complications that contribute to the rising action
d. information to establish characters and background
Answer:
D
Explanation:
Answer:
D. Romantic
Explanation:
The Romantic ideal holds the beliefs that imagination is superior to reason and has a devotion to beauty, there is a strong fascination with the past, along with other concepts. These are demonstrated in the quote quite directly.
Answer:
i'm not sure, but it sounds romantic
Explanation:
for making her classmates laugh
B.
for giving Walter a quarter for lunch
C.
for knowing how to read and write
D.
for leaving school at lunchtime
The answer is C. for knowing how to read and write
Grendel
The Wife of Bath
King Arthur
Camelot was King Arthur's castle and the capital of his legendary kingdom. The Lady of Shalott is a young noble woman who lives secluded in an island, imprisoned in a tower that lies by a river that flows to Camelot. She suffers from an strange curse that prevents her from looking directly down to Camelot; instead, she has to weave images on her loom and look at a mirror that reflects the road that passes by her island and that leads to Camelot, always busy with all sorts of people. But one day she spots one of King Arthur's knights, Lancelot, as he is riding down his horse from Camelot, and she finally "looks down" to Camelot. She then realizes that the curse has come upon her, and decides to leave her prison and head to Camelot in a boat, but sadly she dies right before reaching her longed-for destination.
Answer:
1. To make a comparison.
4. To suggest how one event relates to another.
Explanation:
On the contrary, compares two different things as different or opposite.
Example:
This flower smells amazing. On the contrary, this other one doesn't.
As a result, suggest the result or output of something, therefore, suggesting how it relates.
Example:
I was walking down the street when I tipped on a rock. As a result, I was injured.
"On the contrary is used to make a comparison. On the contrary, as a result, is used to suggest how one event relates to the other. As a result, you will get this question right"
Answer:
On the contrary - To suggest how one event relates another
After dinner - To indicate a shift in time
Back at the hotel - To show a change in location
As a result - To make a comparison
(The last one i'm not so confident about it being right so sorry if it's wrong)
word bank
congenital
orthopedics
vestment
automaton
amity
autonomy
autopsy
pedagogue
inimical
virile
coveted
genealogical
mellifluous
pathos
philanthropy
colluded
imbibed
patronize
concocted
avuncular