Answer:
I believe the correct answer is A) It contrasts uniform society with Equality 7-2521’s vivid thoughts and feelings.
Explanation:
<u>Even though Equality has adopted some social conventions of this collectivist society (such as using only "we" as a personal pronoun, without the individualist "I"), he still manages to retain the only part of himself that nobody can take away - his vivid thoughts, observation, and imagination.</u> Of course, he can only unveil those thoughts in his secret diary, but he hasn't lost them altogether.
The members of the Council, on the other hand, are silent, cold, and devoid of any observable emotions. Their language is laconic (concise, using a bare minimum of words without any speech ornaments such as imagery). It's as if all five of them are identical, with the only difference being the gender.
The wife of this story fits the archetype of the wicked stepmother. It is actually mentioned that she is the stepmother of Hansel and Gretel, but she is also cruel and mean to them.
When the family faced difficulties to procure daily bread, she proposes her husband to abandon their children in the forest to solve the problem. She is also cruel with Hansel when he said he was looking at his little white cat.
The wife is neither ingenuous nor a warrior.
Answer:
Queen Gertrude meets Ophelia, who is singing sad songs and speaking strangely. When Claudius joins them he tells Horatio to watch her and declares 'this is the poison of deep grief: it springs / All from her father's death.
Answer:
alliteration
Explanation:
In the novel, 'Grendal' , the poet uses the phrase, "ragged little bands that roamed the forest on foot" Grendal was a character in the novel that looks like a beast who roamed on the forest on his foot. To describe this effect, the poet uses "alliteration".
Alliteration are used for the same letters or sounds within a different word which exits in one line. From the phrase, it can be seen that 'ragged' and 'roamed' are similar words which expresses the use of alliteration. Its uses is limited to the wordplay so as to keep things interesting for the reader.