Answer:
Did the ranger call in and record his status on the way up the trail
Explanation:
Answer:
This solution is incorrect.
Explanation:
We will use the substitution method to solve this equation.
- The first step is to isolate one of the unknowns to find the solution, in which case we will isolate the x.
Then:
x - y = 75
x = 75 + y
- In the second step, we will replace the x found in the second equation to solve the first equation.
x + y = 743
(75 + y) + y = 743
75 + 2y = 743
2y = 743 - 75
2y = 668
y = 668/2
y = 334
- In the third step, we substitute the value of y in any of the questions to find the final result:
x - y = 75
x - 334 = 75
x = 75 + 334
x = 409
Therefore, if x represents the number of tickets sold before the tournament, and y represents the number of tickets sold at the door, and as the values of x = 409 and y = 334, we can conclude that the assistant made a mistake and inverted the values.
Answer:
•through a character's words and •through a character's actions
Explanation: Hey hope this helps
It looks like you answered your own question, but they also change the theme of the story from one of abandonment, control, and approval/validation.
Frankenstein creates his monster after his mother dies, leaving him feeling abandoned.
His creation is an attempt to give life without the need for a woman (controlling life).
The monster spends much of the story seeking validation from his creator, who wants nothing to do with him. In some sense, this parallels Victor's inability to cope with his mother's loss, except that Victor is still very much alive. I'm sure many people view this as a religious allegory (God abandoning humans).
I don't recall catching any of that in the movies. Instead, they turn it into the typical battle against the unknown/unfamiliar. The monster is not understood, and is grotesque looking, so the people want it gone. Of course, none of the pitchforks and torches are ever carried in the novel.
Of course, there's also the issue of Frankenstein's presentation on screen. In the book, he's clearly described as being yellow; yet, in most of the movies, he's green. Oh, and Frankenstein never yells "it's alive!"
Answer: personification and alliteration
Personification refers to the use of human qualities to describe animals, inanimate objects, abstract ideas or natural phenomena. In this case, the author gives "autumn" qualities that belong to humans, such as "sitting careless on a granary floor."
Alliteration refers to the repetition of identical initial consonant sounds, even when spelled differently. It is also called "initial rhyme." In this case, the author uses alliteration when he says "winnowing wind."