I believe the answer would be apathy because it sounds like she did not care about school any more. She did not even bring a backpack or paper.
Hope you have a nice day.
Hamartia of Oedipus is not overcome and the hubris he commits calls his downfall.
Explanation:
The Hamartia, or the fatal flaw is the one flaw of a good protagonist in a tragedy that brings them down and makes their downfall possible.
This characteristic of Hamartia with Oedipus is his will to control. He believes he can control his fate when he really has no way to do so and falls victim to his own machinations.
The Hubris of a character is when the overstep their limits and challenge the will of Gods. In a bid to change his fate Oedipus does just that and in that way he makes the fate only possible.
Answer: Box 1 Night, Box two Adrian is nervous about doing the play/song, Box 3 in a theater, and on the center of the stage
Explanation: Box 1: you can tell it's at night because it says in the story "The final weeks leading up to tonight"
Box 2: In the beginning it says "Adrian wiped her sweaty hands on her skirt"
Box 3: Because of the fact that if she is doing a play/song it would be in a theater, and she is in the center of the stage because it says "The first notes of the opening number were hanging in the air as Adrian quickly took her place in the center of the stage"
Answer:
yes
Explanation:
he setting of "In Another Country" is Milan, Italy, during autumn. In this season, the atmosphere is cold, which is synonymous with death, an event that is common and frequent in the hospital:
It was cold in the fall in Milan and the dark came very early.
Similarly, the soldiers admitted into the hospital also witness death regularly. On the other hand, the hospital also acts as a haven for the wounded soldiers and protects them from the cold (death, in this case) outside the hospital. In a way, the hospital also separates the wounded soldiers from the civilians outside the hospital:
. . . the men and women would crowd together on the sidewalk so that we would have had to jostle them to get by, we felt held together by there being something that had happened that they, the people who disliked us, did not understand.
The speaker of the story particularly feels this alienation because he is an American in a foreign country (Italy), who has been drafted there to fight in the war with the Allies. Sentences such as "I was a friend, but I was never really one of them" highlight the speaker’s feelings of alienation.
Answer:
Explanation:
read it
This view is not plausible because god is not plausible.