Answer:
1. - G
2. - H
3. - B
4. - C
5. - A
6. - D
7. - F
8. - E
Explanation:
The central and the most important idea of reading the passage is the main idea of the work.
The perspective from which the story is narrated to us is the point of view through which the author highlights his message.
The reason for which a particular work is created is the author's purpose as a literary work always contains either an autobiographical element or social issue which he/she wishes to depict.
The relationship between two or more events in which the cause brings about the consequential effects either positive or negative.
Reading between the lines is the analysis of a particular work for better understanding and criticism.
The method of relating two or more objects is the comparison and contrast for better analysis.
The separation of a whole into parts is cited as Inference for better clarity of the events that occurred throughout the story.
To find as many relationships as possible within or between texts is the ability to connect the character's actions and the plot.
It depends. In most cases emails kind of have a professional stigma following them and are sent to ask questions or to gain information or inform the receiver so it’s best presented in a formal way.
In other cases such as a letter to a friend it can be as informal as the writer would like. Overall though I would say False, emails require professionalism.
Both of them change in a significant way after their deaths.
Agamemnon even says: <em>“Imagine I and Achilles, wrangling over a girl, battling man-to-man. And I, 1 was the first to let my anger flare. Ah if the two of us could ever think as one, Troy could delay her day of death no longer, not one moment”.</em>
They don't show much anger regarding how they died or the fact that they did. So we can ignore the second and third options. Their change is regarding humility, which is something that they did not possess before they were dead. This eliminates the 4th options, leaving us with the correct answer:
* Both show humility after their deaths.