Answer:
Watchdog
Explanation:
A watchdog is used often used for monitoring and reporting in day to day life. More importantly, often in the context of monitoring and reporting illegal activities. Gatekeeping is more about keeping people out, which the media had no power in. They similarly aren't a business nor do they have the power to set an agenda.
Answer:
The poems "Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey", "The World Is Too Much with Us”, and “I Wandered Lonely As a Cloud" are representatives of the Romantic Period.
Explanation:
The mentioned poems are about nature's love. They are celebrating power of nature and its beauty. William Wordsworth's best place to be in is nature. In all the three poems, he admires nature and is happy that he has memories to think about nature.
Wordsworth views nature as a foundation of comfort as he says in the poem "Tintern Abbey" that Nature would never betray a heart that would her.
In “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” Wordsworth thinks about his inner feelings and feels comforted in nature by thinking about the times he has spent. This is main feature of a romantic poetry.
In the poem "The World Is Too Much with Us" he mentions that human has now overlooked nature and expresses grief.
Montresor lures Fortunato by telling him he has obtained a pipe of Amontillado sherry. He mentions obtaining confirmation of the pipe's contents by inviting a fellow wine aficionado, Luchesi, for a private tasting. Not one to be made better of, Fortunato goes with Montresor to the wine cellars of the latter's house, where they wander in the catacombs. Montresor keeps giving Fortunato drinks to keep him drunk, finally arriving at a niche, where Montresor tells his friend that the Amontillado is within. Fortunato enters drunk and unsuspecting, allowing Montresor to chain him to the wall.
Montresor then proceeds to wall up the niche, entombing his friend alive. Fortunato sobers up faster than anticipated, though, and pleads with Montresor. Montresor ignores him and continues, eventually walling him in completely.
Notably though, in the story, Fortunato actually comes to the realization that this is actually what Montresor wants. Montresor doesn't want to murder Fortunato as much as he wants the psychological satisfaction of seeing and hearing him squirm as it dawns on him that he is going to die a slow death and he was so easily tricked into walking into this situation, and mocking him for it. In a final act of defiance, Fortunato refuses to play along at the end, and replaces his panic with cold silence. This silence catches Montresor off-balance, and its evident from narration that he was very confused and annoyed at being robbed of the chance to gloat properly, and even begins to feel "sick at heart" about what he is doing, because the sudden silence gives him no recourse but to actually consider the gravity of the act he is about to carry out. And even those fifty years later, there are still clear hints of Montresor being somewhat bitter about the fact Fortunato managed to outwit him at the end by taking all the fun out of his revenge.
Hope this helps :)
Answer: A (The first option)
Explanation:
A dangling modifier is when its unclear what’s being modified.
In this, the first option doesn’t specify what or who is in a rush. Instead, it just says ‘in a rush’ thus that should be the answer. The rest of the three parts mention that ‘I’ was in a rush.