The reason memory is presented as an abstract painting is because sometimes our memories shift and form into something completely different which is the same for the abstract paintings because every where you look on an abstract painting its different.
I think it is the answer, because when it says it is talking about it as a noun or a subject.
Answer:
Ice cream truck scenario 1
UCS: ice cream truck song
UCR: craving ice cream
CS: song from truck
CR: mouth waters
Green foam ball scenario 2
UCS: green foam ball
UCR: getting ball thrown at her
CS: seeing a green ball
CR: flinching
Banana scenario 3
UCS: banana
UCR: getting really sick and vomiting
CS: banana
CR: feeling nauseous
Hawaiian shirt scenario 4
UCS: math teacher wearing a Hawaiian shirt
UCR: either gets anxiety or pop quiz
CS: seeing any Hawaiian shirt
CR: feeling anxious
Hi. You have not submitted the essay this question refers to, which makes it impossible for it to be answered. However, I will try and help as best I can.
It is only possible to know how the reference to King Midas is important for the essay if the reading of the essay is done. However, King Midas is known to be a very ambitious and wealth-obsessed King, even to the point of selling his own soul to become richer, which causes him to lose his most precious possession, his daughter. In this case, we can consider that the essay must present this king to draw a parallel between the subject of the essay and this tragic story of Midas, stimulated by the thirst for riches. We can therefore consider that the reference to Midas serves to intensify some of Chesterton's positions within the essay.
This is an example of an allusion, because an allusion is a figure of speech that allows a text to make references to other texts, people, characters, places and external situations.
Answer:
This open interest in the idea of immorality is what takes Cecily out of the realm of Victorian hypocrisy and makes her a suitable love interest for Algernon. Her notion that if Jack’s brother is not really wicked he has been “deceiving us all in a very inexcusable manner” turns the plot of the play on its head. She goes on to define hypocrisy as “pretending to be wicked and being really good all the time.” It isn’t, of course. It is the opposite of hypocrisy. In fact, it is the creed of the Wildean dandy-hero.
Explanation: