Answer:
with the given choices
A) statements by a character about clothes they like.
B) “Ophelia is mad,” he said.
C) the narrator describing a character as “polite”
D) a character making a list of things they hate
E) “Orville sighed as he looked at the ad for the new phone. He really ought to save his money instead. But just thinking about the phone made his hands quiver uncontrollably.”
Answer:
Direct tells the reader
Indirect shows the reader
E) “Orville sighed as he looked at the ad for the new phone. He really ought to save his money instead. But just thinking about the phone made his hands quiver uncontrollably.”
Explanation:
Explanation:
Answer:
Death and the King's Horseman isn't just about a clash of cultures—it's also about a clash of religions. Yoruba spirituality and Elesin's attempts to confront mortality and the afterlife are very much at the heart of the story, and Soyinka himself sees the spiritual dilemmas that the play presents as the key thing going on. The play definitely prompts us to think about different religions and customs and how they intersect and clash, dropping references to Islam and Christianity as well as lots of discussion of Yorubam religious practices.
Explanation:
By showing the richness of Yoruba traditions while simultaneously failing to show the British characters actively engaged in any kind of religion, Soyinka suggests the emptiness of British customs and religion.
Answer:
Depends
Explanation:
Is your topic general space, stars, the planets, or space phenomenon?
If it's general space, try writing about different feats humanity has made in space exploration. For example, why not write about how America was the first country to put a man in the moon?
If it's the stars, chose a star and write about. For example, there's Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky.
If it's about the planets, chose a planet and write about it, and it's ecosystem. For example, Venus, Earth's sister planet, is the hottest planet in our solar system despite not actually being the planet closest to the Sun, because it's sulfur cloud atmosphere traps and mutliplys heat, (like a hyper greenhouse gas effect).
If it's about space phenomenon, try writing about rare instances in space, such as comets, or asteroids. For example, Hailey's Comet is a comet that passes Earth once every 70 years.
Rhetorical questions add a level of cheesiness to the paper and unless you are a very good writer, and I mean college professor level, then you will most likely fail at any attempt. Also writing research papers your suppose to be telling the reader what they don't know instead of asking them what is already do know.