Answer:
trueeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
Explanation:
It was morning. He knew it was morning because Gerasim had gone, and Peter the footman had come and put out the candles, drawn back one of the curtains, and begun quietly to tidy up. Whether it was morning or evening, Friday or Sunday, made no difference, it was all just the same: the gnawing, unmitigated, agonizing pain, never ceasing for an instant, the consciousness of life inexorably waning but not yet extinguished, the approach of that ever dreaded and hateful Death which was the only reality, and always the same falsity. What were days, weeks, hours, in such a case?
I believe the answer is:
1. Ivan Ilyich wanted to weep, wanted to be petted and cried over, and then his colleague Shebek would come, and instead of weeping and being petted, Ivan Ilyich would assume a serious, severe, and profound air.
2. "This falsity around him and within him did more than anything else to poison his last days
From the first sentence, the narrator infer that even when a member of rising middle class is experiencing grief, they are forced to hide it due to the concern of their social standing.
From the second sentence, the narrator infers that unability to express emotion started to eating them from the inside and make them miserable.
b. the friend is taking a nap under the tree.
c. the friend was killed by the other friend's concealed wrath.
d. the foe stole and ate the apple.
e. the foe was killed by the confessed anger of his enemy.
2. In which stanza does the speaker represent himself/herself as capable of both good and evil?
a. Stanza 1
b. Stanza 2
c. Stanza 3
d. Stanza 4
e. None of the above
3. Why is the apple in stanza 3 poisonous?
a. It is the apple from the Garden of Eden.
b. It grows from wrath.
c. It is grown from unrequited love.
d. both the first and second choices above
e. both the second and third choices above
4. In which stanza does the speaker address what the foe has done to anger him/her?
a. Stanza 1
b. Stanza 2
c. Stanza 3
d. Stanza 4
e. None of the above
5. In line 7, the pronoun it refers to
a. wrath.
b. friend.
c. enemy.
d. fears.
e. tears.
6. In which stanza does the speaker tend to or nurse his/her wrath?
a. Stanza 1
b. Stanza 2
c.Stanza 3
d.Stanza 4
e. None of the above
7. In line 14, "When the night had veiled the pole," the word pole means
a. sky.
b. tree.
c.stars.
d. all of the above
e. none of the above
8. The verbs watered and sunned in stanza 2
a. assist the comparison of unconcealed wrath to that of nurturing a plant.
b. assist the comparison of unconcealed wrath to that of killing a plant.
c. assist the comparison of concealed wrath to that of nurturing a plant.
d. assist the comparison of concealed wrath to that of killing a plant.
e. none of the above
9. Why is the apple in stanza 3 bright and shiny?
a. It alludes to the temptation of the Garden of Eden.
b. It grows from a confessed wrath.
c. It grows from a concealed wrath.
d. both the first and second choices above
e. both the first and third choices above
10. The poem ponders all of the following except:
a. Can anger be productive?
b. Should anger be repressed or expressed?
c. Should poetry be didactic?
d. What happens when anger is expressed?
e. What happens when anger is repressed?
The questions presented were about a poem and implied many aspects such as symbolism, understanding the speaker's emotions, mannerism, and intentions, as well as the figure of speech used in the poem. The 'apple' in the poem is a symbol of wrath that grows from anger, and the speaker uses the idea of nurturing this wrath in the same way a plant might be nurtured. The 'pole' in the poem refers to the sky, implying the passage of time or a change in conditions.
The answers to the questions posed about the poem are as follows:
#SPJ11
To express the expression (2x – 3)(x + 7) as a trinomial, we distribute each term in the first bracket to the terms of the second. The result is 2x² + 14x - 3x - 21. After combining like terms, we find that the trinomial form is 2x² + 11x - 21.
The question asks to express the expression (2x – 3)(x + 7) as a trinomial. To do this, we use the distributive property of multiplication over addition, which states that a(b+c) = ab + ac. Applying this rule to the expression gives:
2x(x) + 2x(7) - 3(x) - 3(7)
Parsing this out leads to:
2x² + 14x - 3x - 21
Finally, we combine like terms:
2x² + 11x - 21
Thus, the trinomial form of the expression (2x – 3)(x + 7) is 2x² + 11x - 21.
#SPJ2
b.) the emphasis on human optimism
c.) the emphasis on the beauty of nature
d.) the emphasis on the importance of society
Answer:
The emphasis on the beauty of nature
Explanation:
PLATO
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The correct answer is C) paper.
In "The Youngest Doll,'' the doctor’s son has a paper silhouette.
"The Youngest Doll" is a story written by Puerto Rican author Rosario Ferre in 1976. It was part of the collection "Pandora's Roles" published in English until 1991. It is a feminist piece of literature that refers to the revenge of a woman that was bitten by an animal in a river and she could not marry. She dedicated her life to her nieces. It shows how women were discriminated against by social class and gender.
The other options of the question were A) tall. B) transparent. C) sharp.