Answer:
These are the answers for the question:
- the effect of plot events on a character’s growth or development
- the sensory details used to describe the novel’s settings
- the flat characters who don’t change by the end of the story
- the background information provided in the story’s exposition
And this is the correct answer:
- the effect of plot events on a character’s growth or development
Explanation:
Most stories, including novels, are character driven: this means that is the characters (often a few, specially the protagonists and the main antagonists) who carry the story forward, and part of that process is the character's growth or development, which is influenced by the events of the plot.
This character growth is often the most important element of the novel's theme.
So u do cross multiplication first
1.5/6=10/p ---> 1.5p=10×6
1.5p=60
then divide both sides by 1.5 since u want p by itself
p= 60/1.5
p=40
Lennie accidentally kills the puppy by petting or squeezing it too hard. Lennie's dream is to take care of rabbits. When the puppy dies, Lennie has no real remorse for the dog- as he's only worried about what George is going to say about the dead dog (and whether or not he'll let Lennie get rabbits). Lennie tries to justify it by saying that dogs aren't rabbits and that it was the dog's fault that it died in the first place. He even considers hiding the body.
The answer is A, because it has no errors.