Answer:
C) It summarizes the main topic of the essay.
Explanation:
Hope this helps! Pls give brainliest!
<span>C. Guard or protector </span>
You could right about baking and all of the senses you use while doing so? Like the smell of it, the hot oven, hearing the oven beep, and tasting the food! Hope that helped
Question 1
Tony didn’t want to do anything heroic but he felt like he had to when no one else stepped up. How often is that true in life?
Answer
This is always true. We are the answers we have been looking for. Many times, we look for answers and help externally when all the help and answers are actually on the inside of us. Tony demonstrated this when he decided he was going to try to unlock the door instead of hoping that Iris would have all the answers and save them.
Questions 2
Tony wants so badly to be normal. However, how would this chapter have been different if he had been a normal kid instead of a bionic slice of pizza?
Answer:
First, one thing is for sure the dog wouldn't have considered him a snack.
Second, the boy wouldn't have been in harms way. The icy robot was after him. But he attracted the attention of the boy because of how he looked and so put him in danger because the robot didn't care whether it was a boy or not.
Also, the robot would have gotten them. He was able to unlock the door because, he is a slice of pizza who cold stretch its arm through very tight spaces.
Question 3
Tony and Iris are already starting to become friends even though they barely know each other. Why is this the case?
Answer:
Both are already becoming friends because, strength and disaster tend to being people together.
Question 4
Who is behind the icy robot?
Answer:
The villain of the story.
Most stories have the Heroic characters that is always at logger heads with a Villainous character.
Cheers!
Ophelia's death could be understood - as Gertrude contents - as being an accident. According to this view, Ophelia's branch snapped and she drowned in the river below. According to this viewpoint, Ophelia's death is tragic because it was a meaningless accident; her life is lost not by her own design or in response to the events transpiring around her, but because of the whims of chance and accident. On the other hand, Ophelia's death can be understood as being a suicide: Ophelia died, then, due to being driven mad because of her unrequited love for Hamlet and society's unreasonable expectations for women and their behavior. This understanding of her death is tragic because it shows the extent to which Ophelia was wounded and oppressed.