Answer:
The central idea is developed through the relationship that the author makes between the construction of buildings and human construction.
Explanation:
In "Don't Hate on the Trait", the author tries to explain how a human being is built physically and intimately. For that he makes a simple and very intelligent relationship about how a building is built. The author shows that several details and factors are necessary to build a building that works perfectly, in the same way the human being is built through the genes donated by his mother and father, who provide all the physical details of this construction, and, through environment that provides all the details that build the individual's personality and behavior.
Answer:
In this excerpt from the short story The Passage by Durango Mendoza, Joe describes the sun and the stars and how they relate to life and death. The "daddy" is referring to the sun, and the "little children" are the stars. The story explores the theme of loss of innocence and mortality, and this passage further conveys these two themes. The sun setting is a metaphor for death. When the sun dies, the stars finally come out. This could be interpreted to mean that a person cannot truly grow up until they experience the loss of a loved one.
Yes, it could've ended differently if the two families came to an understanding with each other. This would've changed the fact that Romeo and Juliet die, since you know, they were trying their best to get married secretly in fear that their families would continue fighting (maybe kill someone else).