B.It forms its past by adding -ed or -d to the present form.
C.It forms its past participle by adding -ed or -d to the present form.
D.It has four principal parts.
I. Spiders are considered to be errors of God’s creation.
II. Spiders are powerless should a rock fall on them.
III. Spiders are considered the lowest form of life and thus expendable.
II. Spiders are powerless should a rock fall on them.
Edwards uses this comparison of non-believers to a spider to show that should God decide to send someone to hell, he or she does not have the power to stop it. Even if the non-believer felt assured and arrogant about it, he would still not have the ability to keep himself out of Hell. Option I is incorrect because Puritans, like Edwards, did not believe that any of God's creations were a mistake. Option III is also incorrect because the purpose is not to show the expendable nature of the spider, but rather the almighty power of God.
He compares unbelievers to spiders because they are powerless if a rock falls on them, as shown in option II.
Edward uses the metaphor to make a comparison between unbelievers and a spider. This metaphor shows a comparison, where unbelievers are powerless to escape the condemnation of hell if God so wills. This is because no one can stop the will of God, just as a spider cannot stop a stone from destroying its web.
More information about metaphors in the link:
Answer:
The correct answer is B. The Eloi were masters and the Morlocks were their servants.
Explanation:
Through the descriptions we get from the Time traveller we know that the Eloi are pretty, dumb, wear clothes and do not work, and, on the other hand, the Morlocks are ugly, not as dumb as the Eloi, do not wear clothes and do the work. With this information, the Time Traveller infers that the human race has evolved into two different species: the Eloi have evolved from the iddle middle and high classes, and the Morlocks have evolved from the working class and the poor.
Answer:
Explanation:
This section would no doubt be related with the subject of power, as in the mother,who seems all the more every now and again in different entries, gives up hers.
The ideas that is most closely related to the theme in these lines are ‘It is the law of life: one takes, then one hands over to another in one's turn. But that does not mean we obey the law readily and willingly.’