Answer:
it's a type of frame thing for an image. i will try to describe it: the edges of the image fade instead of it being rectilinear.
example of vignette frame
notice how the image fades into the edges
Answer: C. The events of the Inferno take place before Dante was exiled from Florence.
Dante Alighieri was an Italian poet, writer and political thinker. He is the author of <em>The Divine Comedy</em>, considered one of the greatest works of Mediaeval literature. The work draws on Dante's experience of exile from his native city in Florence. However, the events of <em>Inferno</em> take place before Dante was exiled from Florence. Inferno is the first section of this epic poem, the other two being <em>Purgatory</em> and <em>Paradise</em>.
I believe the correct answer is: “…the two pilgrims successfully resist Flatterer, who tries to trap them with a net, and Atheist, who tries to convince them that the Celestial City does not exist.”
In this excerpt from “Pilgrim's Progress” (1678), a Christian allegory written by John Bunyan, specific characters that serve as an allegory for distractions that one must resist to live a life of faith are Flatterer and Atheist which try to divert tempt Christian and Hopeful from the proper path. Therefore, the quotation that best develops this idea is:
“…the two pilgrims successfully resist Flatterer, who tries to trap them with a net, and Atheist, who tries to convince them that the Celestial City does not exist.”
P.S. Note that if it wasn't plural, the main distraction would be Apollyon, a form of Satan, as the Satan was tempting Christ the most in the desert.
B. a mug of hot tea; renames this
<span>Appositive is noun or noun phrase in which retitles, renames and helps describe the noun that is adjacent to it in the sentence. The appositive is like a more clear illustration or wants to illuminate the said subject in the statement.
<span>1. The appositive word in the sentence is the author. Which describes and renames Gary Jackson in the sentence</span> </span> <span>
2. It renames Charles Dickens.</span><span> </span>