Answer and Explanation:
Commitment to the outside world allows European nations to establish commercial, political and social relations with countries outside Europe that can offer elements and factors that Europe does not have, but which are necessary for its progress. This type of relationship requires the commitment of Europe, and when this commitment is strong and efficient, these reactions are also strong and manage to promote the progress and rise of European countries. However, when commitment is deficient and weak, relationships can be broken, or even not started, which can help the return and downfall of European nations.
Answer:
description and functions as an adjective
Explanation:
hope this helps.
Character AnalysisActions
We don't have very many characters to learn about in this story…just Prince Prospero and the Red Death (who's barely a character anyway). But what little we do know of them we often learn through action. Prospero abandons his kingdom to live a life of wanton pleasure with 1,000 of his friends in a secluded hideaway. He's a party animal, as we can guess from his wild masquerade. And he's also quite the hothead: when he's offended by the guest in the Red Death costume, he orders him to be unmasked and publicly hung. When that doesn't work (because everyone's too nervous), he loses his cool and charges the Red Death with a knife.
As for the Red Death, he just "stalks" around and kills people.
Direct Characterization
The narrator tells us straight up that Prospero's might be a little bit "unhinged," though he doesn't tell us precisely whether he really is or not. As he puts it at one point: "There are some who would have thought him mad. His followers felt that he was not. It was necessary to hear and see and touch him to be sure that he was not" (6). He also tells us of Prospero's fanciful but artistic tastes, and his love of the bizarre.
Location
Prospero's character is reflected in the abbey and the suite he's designed. The abbey, completely cut off from the world, displays his own lack of concern for his subjects. As for the suite, it's daring, dramatic, imaginative, and perhaps a bit deranged. More than anything else, it's through the brilliant inventiveness of his masquerade that we see Prospero's artistic side. And his madness.
Physical Appearance
The only real details we have of the Red Death are the details of his appearance. He looks like a dead body wrapped in burial clothes, wearing a corpse-mask, and he's covered in sprinkled blood. Oh, and there happens to be nothing under the costume, so he's got the whole "spectral" thing going on in a big way.
Names
Prince Prospero's name makes us think of prospering – of wealth, wine, and festivities. In short all those things associated with living life to the fullest. That sets him against the Red Death. No big question about what his name means.
Prospero's name may also be an allusion to Shakespeare's character of the same name. The connection is surprisingly rich.
Answer:
D). "But cowardice was stronger than common sense."
Explanation:
The text 'Panic Fears' explores the theme of 'muddle between the narrator's mind and his reality' and the quote 'cowardice was stronger than common sense' most aptly reflects this key idea which the author throws light upon. It displays that he was more scared/panicked than he was supposed to be which mirrors that his mind/senses were at the constant mess with the actual reality. Thus, <u>option D</u> is the correct answer.