Answer:
Option B, blind spot.
Explanation:
She is unaware of this trait but others have been aware of this trait.
The two terms that were in the elements of fiction lecture are the conflict and setting.
The setting is described as the time and place where the story happens. While conflict in literature is defined as the competition between two opposing forces. As the story begins, Edgar Allen Poe describes the setting as “During the whole of a dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung oppressively low.” A sense of dullness of the area is established by Poe as the narrator is approaching and this dullness remained throughout the story and this is later changed into death. The conflict in “The Fall of the House of Usher” is when the narrator felt a creepy feeling when he approaches the house. The house’s scenery and appearance combined with the feelings of his past give him an uneasy feeling.
Answer: The tissue(s) that George destroyed was (were) probably the PHLOEM.
and the tissue that Goege left undisturbed was (were) the XYLEM.
A PHLOEM tissue is the vascular tissue in land plants primarily responsible for the distribution of sugars and nutrients manufactured in the shoot.
A XYLEM tissue is the vascular tissue in land plants primarily responsible for the distribution of water and minerals taken up by the roots; also the primary component of wood.
As can be deduced from both definitions, removal of the phloem will ultimately lead to the death of the plant because the phloem is primarily responsible for the distribution of sugars and nutrients manufactured in the shoot.
The correct answer is - c. it encouraged written language so that records could be kept.
The development of agriculture enabled people to settle in at one place instead of having a nomadic life. This way of life and the sufficient amount of food enabled the people to focus on other things, one of which was the invention of the written language which allowed the people to be able to express themselves better, or to preserve records over time, to provoke the creativity in them...