I believe the answer is 1, allows the reader to approximate the meaning of an unknown word.
Answer:
F. Scott Fitzgerald, "Winter Dreams" and Jack London, “To Build A Fire”
Explanation:
Third-person limited is where a story is told by a narrator rather than a person (uses words like he, she, they, etc.) and you can see the thoughts of only one singular person. These stories have these 2 qualities.
Answer:
charlie at the end of the story is mostly the same but at the end he was a little bit smarter, and aware that he was once smart. now he feels humiliated b/c he isn't as smart as he once was.
"I finished my research paper two days early."
A good way to determine active vs passive is to ask who performed the action. Did the subject perform the action, or was the action performed "by" the subject?
The subject performs the action in this sentence:
I = [subject]
finished = [action]
my research paper = [thing on which the action was performed]
In the other examples, the subject has an action performed on it.
My research paper = [subject]
was finished/is being finished = [action]
two days early = [time frame information, not really important for the discussion here]
At this point, you have no indication as to who will finish the paper, do you? No. You assume that the paper will be completed "by me," but it could just as easily be completed "by my friend."
If you can add "by [person/thing]" to a sentence, it's passive voice. If you can't, it's not. Clearly, you would never say "I finished my research paper by me."
sentence 4 is most clearly contains foreshadowing