Answer:
Situational Irony
Explanation:
Situational irony occurs when incongruity appears between expectations of something to happen, and what actually happens instead. Charlie expected to become like other people, but he is as isolated as when his intelligence was limited. He expected to be like other people, but was actually still isolated.
Answer:
B. The composer's faith in the instrument and his knowledge of it played an important role in his success as a solo performer.
Explanation:
Option B is the correct answer. It is correct pronoun-antecedent agreement.
We all know that a pronoun is a word used instead of a noun. An antecedent is known to be a word which a pronoun stands for in a sentence.
For example, in the sentence above, the antecedent is the "composer" and the pronoun that refers to the antecedent is "his". We can see that the pronoun agrees with the antecedent. In pronoun-antecedent, the pronoun in the sentence must agree with its antecedent in number. This means that a singular pronoun must replace a singular noun while plural pronoun must replace a plural noun.
The Predestinators send in their figures to the
fertilizers.
<span>This
line is taken from the novel Brave New World, which is written by Aldous Huxley. This novel was written in 1931 and published in 1932. There is a social predestination
room for predestinators, the predestinators are the persons who predestinates
something.</span>
I would say that is False. Hope this helped :)
Answer:
If the question is referring to Rothman's article "The Serious Superficiality of the Great Gatsby", I believe the correct answer is C. The novel is about refusing to see reality no matter the cost.
Explanation:
<u>According to Rothman, the novel's (and the eponymous film's) appeal stems from its flatness, seductiveness, and rejection of reality.</u> Even though the characters are nominally seeking love and meaning, they are "desperate to give in to nearly anything—a drink, a person, a story, a feeling, a song, a crowd, an idea".
Rothman goes on to say: <u>"'Gatsby' captures, with great vividness, the push and pull of illusion and self-delusion; the danger and thrill of forgetting, lying, and fantasizing; the hazards and the indispensability of dreaming and idealization."</u> The underlying reality of the novel and the so-called "roaring twenties" that serve as its backdrop is grim. It's a world of deep class struggles, poverty, social climbers such as Gatsby who earned millions illegally. However, the characters in "Gatsby" are eager to sweep these unpleasant issues under the rug and cover them with parties, riches, gossip, and other superficial ways to kill time.