Dear Jose,
Hi Jose, my best suggestions would be to site see your town, or to be more specific your neighborhood. There may be a park close by, you may be able to find new friends, assuming if you didn't have any already. Maybe even a community pool if you have one nearby.
If this does not work there are plenty of things to do at home! Like learning magic, how to draw, and even a favorable sport! I hope the helped you Jose!
From, Your name.
(I suggest typing your name in the name square)
Answer:
C. In the text, Antony is mournful and still, while in the film he is angry and animated.
Explanation:
In the text, you can tell just by the description and how he is talking that he is mournful and sad. But in the film, he is presented as angry and not so much in deep grief.
I think that is “none of these” since a plot is a sequence of event in a story and each causes or lead to the next. Events of the plot reveal a problem called the conflict.
1. A story that is or was considered a true explanation of the natural world (and how it came to be).
<span>2. Characters are often non-human – e.g. gods, goddesses, supernatural beings, first people.
</span>3. Setting is a previous proto-world (somewhat like this one but also different)
.4. Plot may involve interplay between worlds (this world and previous or original world)
.5. Depicts events that bend or break natural laws (reflective of connection to previous world)
.6. Cosmogonic/metaphysical explanation of universe (formative of worldview).
7. Functional: “Charter for social action” – conveys how to live: assumptions, values, core meanings of individuals, families, communities.
8. Evokes the presence of Mystery, the Unknown (has a “sacred” tinge).
9. Reflective and formative of basic structures (dualities: light/dark, good/bad, being/nothingness, raw/cooked, etc.) that we must reconcile. Dualities often mediated by characters in myths.
10. Common theme: language helps order the world (cosmos); thus includes many lists, names, etc.
11. Metaphoric, narrative consideration/explanation of “ontology” (study of being). Myths seek to answer, “Why are we here?” “Who are we?” “What is our purpose?” etc. – life’s fundamental questions
.<span>12. Sometimes: the narrative aspect of a significant ritual (core narrative of most important religious practices of society; fundamentally connected to belief system; sometimes the source of rituals)</span>