Answer:
C. Irini plucked plump berries as thorns cut her pink stained fingers.
Explanation:
While the other sentences portray decent detail, they mostly just cut to the point of the story, without giving you any real visualization. Sentence C uses the most use of adjectives, which can really help you to use your senses, and see what going on, even as you aren't really there.
He opposed helping the Poor because he strongly believed in Social Darwinism which means he used it to justify political conservatism, imperialism, and racism and to discourage intervention and reform.
Answer and explanation:
At the end of the second paragraph Soueif tells readers that "the lights of Cairo will not come on tonight," referring to a government-imposed curfew and shutdown of internet and phone communications. This glimpse contributes to Soueif's description of the present as in the present will be constantly changing given the uncertainty of not knowing how that night will end taking into account the events that occur.
Answer:
Kovaloff doesn't question why his nose is walking and talking.
Explanation:
Magical realism is a literary chain that aims to merge the magical universe with reality, showing unreal or strange elements as something habitual and commonplace.
In the short story "The Nose" of Nicolai Gogól, Major Kovalióv wakes up and realizes that instead of his nose there is a "perfectly perfect place". The major does not question the reason that made his nose disappear, but decides to look for it and finds the nose dressed as a high-ranking officer and pretending to be a human. This represents the magical realism of the short story of "the nose," because even without the nose on his face, and finding his nose pretending to be a human being, the major is not surprised at all of this and acts as if it were a common thing.