How does the structure of the text develop the author's ideas? The author mentions the Great Spirit several times to emphasize t
hat the Great Spirit was an important influence in his ancestors' lives. The author uses foreshadowing to hint that his ancestors would eventually lose faith in the Great Spirit. The author uses reverse chronological order to explain how his great-grandfather became chief at such a young age. The author compares his great-grandfather's leadership with the white man's leadership to show how the men influenced each other.
The structure of the text develops the author's ideas as the author mentions the Great Spirit several times to emphasize that the Great Spirit was an important influence in his ancestors' lives
<h3>What is structure?</h3>
It should be noted that structure simply means the way that a text is organized in a literary work.
In this case, the structure of the text develops the author's ideas as the author mentions the Great Spirit several times to emphasize that the Great Spirit was an important influence in his ancestors' lives.
Yes he does. Money only matters to Gatsby because he thinks it will help him win Daisy back. An easy one-liner about money not buying happiness doesn't apply to Gatsby. Daisy will bring happiness to Gatsby, nothing else
I had the same question and the answer was knowledgeable but you didn't give options so our questions might be talking about completely different passages