My personal opinion to what the answers are:
Readers are uneasy with the narrator's growing instability,
Readers question the narrator's ability to act rationally,
Readers understand that the account given by the narrator is true.
I hope this helped, again, this is only my opinion to what I believe the answers are.
Answer:
The San master trackers he filmed demonstrated the skills required to track an animal in the wild. If Craig Foster could just have picked out an octopus who wasn't his teacher, all would have been well.
Explanation:
Answer:
C.
Explanation:
Medium scoring essays, according to guidelines, are those essays that provide no special insight.
The important points that make an essay high-scoring are:
- That the essay should speak about the topic and not deviate from it.
- The paragraphs should be well organized, that is, should shift from one point to another making all the points clear.
- The essay should be thoroughly developed.
- It should be sophisticated in style.
<u>An essay that just cites and summarizes specific information from the text and does not provide insight with the text will be considered as a medium scoring essay as it provides the writer's idea in a simplistic way and predictable information only</u>.
So, the correct answer is option C.
In "Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde", by Robert Louis Stevenson, Utterson and Enfield are taking their usual walk. It is a Sunday. They come to the front of the door in which they have seen Hyde enter and is also the back way to Dr. Jekyll's place. They think of inviting Dr. Jekyll to join them for a walk. They reach the middle window that is half-open and Utterson sees Dr. Jekyll sitting beside the window. When he is addressed Dr. Jekyll answers he is very low, and that this state won't last very long. He says that he is very glad for the invitation but that he dares not to go. He cannot let them in either, because the place is not fit. They plan to talk from where they are. The smile on Dr. Jekyll's face gives place to an expression of terror and despair, as he shuts the window hastily.