Help me, please I'll give brainliest to the first answer and 30 points
Help me, please I'll give brainliest to the first answer - 1

Answers

Answer 1
Answer:

the answer is C because it has more of a big and poetic explanation of the picture  up above

Answer 2
Answer:

Answer:

The answer would be C

Explanation:

C is the correct answer because evocative language refers to describing something and sentence C is the most descriptive.  


Related Questions

What does the answer to the question about how montresor knew about his servants leaving for the night tell you about their relationship
In which sentence is the word but used as a preposition? A. We would like to visit the Grand Canyon, but our vacation time is up. B. John liked baseball but not football. C. None but the brave shall enter in. D. Children should be seen but not heard.
In which sentence is the predicate nominative correct? A. Kelly's little sister is her. B. The writers of the funniest story were Ken and him. C. The fastest racer is her. D. The volunteers are Harry, Karen, and she.
What role do the statements stormy calm and cautiously resolved play in the passage?
Francois and Perrault are

What do the changes to the neighborhood suggest about residents felings once upon a time

Answers

Answer: The changes suggest that the residents have gradually become more frightened and want to defend themselves.

Explanation:

In Nadine Gordimer's short story, Once Upon A Time, the protagonist is frightened by the sound in the night and assumes that it is a thief.

As there has been an increase in crime in the suburb - houses are burgled and a person even dies, the neighbors take precautions to protect themselves. The first changes to the neighborhood are the alarm systems, but as they go off unnecessarily, they soon become useless. However, as more and more suspicious people are seen in the neighborhood, more severe measures are taken. For instance, the roses and perfect lawns are replaced by the fences and walls. These changes suggest that the residents become more and more frightened and address this problem more seriously.

In Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, what does the fact that the White Rabbit “starts violently,” drops his gloves, and runs away from Alice show?A.
He is nervous.


B.
He is a trickster.


C.
He is friendly.


D.
He is dangerous.

Answers

It shows that he was

A. nervous. The rabbit was always fidgeting and running around in a manic state. 

Cheshire Cat was the trickster.

The Gryphon is really the only one who's friendly with Alice.

The Queen of Hearts is the dangerous one, she always screaming "off with their heads"

The answer is a he is nervous.Hope I helped!

Select all the correct answers. What symbolism is found in this excerpt from James Joyce's "Araby"? North Richmond Street, being blind, was a quiet street except at the hour when the Christian Brothers' School set the boys free. An uninhabited house of two storeys stood at the blind end, detached from its neighbours in a square ground. The other houses of the street, conscious of decent lives within them, gazed at one another with brown imperturbable faces. The boys being set free symbolizes them being free from the rules of the church. The uninhabited house represents the narrator's feeling of emptiness. The blind street symbolizes the aimless and drab life on North Richmond Street. The consciousness of decent lives symbolizes a comparison of neighbors' lives.

Answers

The Symbolism which are found in this excerpt from James Joyce's "Araby" are as follows:

The boys being set free symbolizes them being free from the rules of the church.

The narrator of the story “Araby” is found surrounded by the Catholic ideas. He and his friends all have witnessed their upbringing amidst religion. Though the story does not highlight the extent to which the narrator believes in the religion, he is seen many time explaining things and situations through Catholic ideas and imagery.

The uninhabited house represents the narrator's feeling of emptiness.

Since the narrator had studied in an all-boys school, he finds the absence of girls in his life during his journey of adulthood. The dullness and emptiness of the streets of Dublin add on to his loneliness.

The blind street symbolizes the aimless and drab life on North Richmond Street.

Life in the streets of Dublin had been dull and brown for the narrator as he finds no joy there. The life of the people in the city Dublin had grown dull and single-sided from which the narrator wants to escape. Through Mangan’s sister, the narrator finds a mental escape and the ‘bazaar’ of Araby gives him a physical escape from his dull, boring and brown life.

As Malvolio grows more and more upset when he is locked in a dark room, Sir Toby says, "I would we were well rid of this knavery." What does this show about Sir Toby? A. He thinks that Malvolio really has gone mad, and he's proud of himself. B. He thinks the joke they've played on Malvolio has gone too far, and he regrets it. C. He thinks that Malvolio is only pretending to be distraught, and he's annoyed. D. He thinks that Malvolio must be let out of the room so that he can attend to important business.Which theme does the subplot involving Sir Andrew help convey?

A.
A trusted friend can often help resolve an important conflict.

B.
One shouldn't think too much or too little of oneself.

C.
The path to true love is full of difficulties and obstacles.

D.
It is best to always take one's own actions and the actions of others very seriously.

Which event contributes to the resolution of the play's main conflict?

A.
Malvolio falls in love with Olivia.

B.
Viola falls in love with Duke Orsino.

C.
Olivia falls in love with Cesario.

D.
Viola stops pretending to be Cesario.

Why does Sebastian's arrival in Illyria further confuse several characters in Twelfth Night?

A.
Sebastian is dressed as a woman, so he looks just like Viola.

B.
Sebastian dresses in yellow stockings, cross-gartered, like Malvolio.

C.
Sebastian looks just like Cesario.

D.
Sebastian immediately falls in love with Viola.

Why does Sir Andrew make a fool out of himself in Twelfth Night?

A.
He lets other characters talk him out of wise decisions.

B.
He is trying to show other characters how they are being foolish.

C.
His love for Olivia blinds him to the truth.

D.
He hopes that his ridiculous behavior will win Olivia's heart.

Which sentence best describes Sir Toby?

A.
He's a careless thief.

B.
He's a jolly prankster.

C.
He's an honorable knight.

D.
He's a devoted uncle.

Why does Olivia say "Heaven restore thee!" to Malvolio when she encounters him quoting Maria's letter and dressed in yellow stockings, cross-gartered?

A.
She thinks he has fallen in love with Maria.

B.
She thinks he has gone mad.

C.
She think he has changed his selfish ways.

D.
She thinks he has offended Duke Orsino.

Answers

As Malvolio grows more and more upset when he is locked in a dark room, Sir Toby says, "I would we were well rid of this knavery."
The above phrase shows this about Sir Toby: B. He thinks the joke they've played on Malvolio has gone too far, and he regrets it.

The theme of the subplot involving Sir Andrew help convey that B. One shouldn't think too much or too little of oneself.
In this case, Sir Andrew thinks too little of himself that he is easily manipulated by Sir Toby.


When D. Viola stops pretending to be Cesario, this event contributes to the resolution of the play's main conflict.


Sebastian's arrival in Illyria further confuse several characters in Twelfth Night because C.
Sebastian looks just like Cesario.

Sir Andrew make a fool out of himself in Twelfth Night because A. He lets other characters talk him out of wise decisions.


B. He’s a jolly prankster is the sentence that best describes Sir Toby.

Olivia say "Heaven restore thee!" to Malvolio when she encounters him quoting Maria's letter and dressed in yellow stockings, cross-gartered because B. She thinks he has gone mad.



Read these excerpts from Charles Dickens's Oliver Twist and identify the meaning of the words in bold based on their context.Now. Mr.Bumble was a fat man, and a choleric so, instead of responding to this open-hearted salutation in a kindred spirit, he gave the little
wicket a tremendous shake, and then bestowed upon it a kick which could have emanated from no leg but a beadle's.
Oliver, having had by this time as much of the outer coat of dirt which encrusted his face and hands, removed, as could be scrubbed off in
one washing, was led into the room by his benevolent protectress.
The boys polished them with their spoons till they shone again; and when they had performed this operation (which never took very long, the
spoons being nearly as large as the bowls), they would sit staring at the copper with such eager eyes, as if they could have devoured the very
bricks of which it was composed; employing themselves, meanwhile, in sucking their fingers most assiduously, with the view of catching up
any stray splashes of gruel that might have been cast thereon.
choleric =
encrusted =
assiduously =

Answers

From the words that were used in the passage, the meaning of the following words are:

  • Choleric: bad tempered
  • encrusted: closed
  • assiduously: eager

What are words and their meanings?

These are the closest meaning to the words as they have been used in the passage.

A choleric person is characterized as one that is known to have a temper and for something to be encrusted, it means that it is encircled.

Read more on Oliver Twist here: brainly.com/question/1865675

Answer:

choleric =

bad-tempered

encrusted =

covered

assiduously =

eagerly

Explanation: Plato

PLEASE HELP! :/What is the tense of the capitalized verb in the sentence?
Lately, I HAVE HEARD strange noises coming from the attic.
A. present
B. past perfect
C. past
D. present perfect

Answers

The correct answer is D, this is 'present perfect' tense. It is formed with the use of the verb HAVE in present simple tense (so, HAVE/HAS), and the past participle of a verb (or the third column of irregular verbs). 
A cannot be correct, because then it would say - I hear.
B cannot be correct, because then it would say - I had heard.
C cannot be correct, because then it would say - I heard.
And since there is also HAVE HEARD, the correct answer has to be D.
C. Past
Past perfect is defined as something occurred before another action in the past. 
Example: I had my things packed before I went to Hawaii.
She had studied all night before the last test.