<span>I believe that the theme is about letting go (King Trident & Ariel), following your heart (Ariel & Herself), trickery (Ursala & Ariel) there are many themes in the Little Mermaid movie. Those are just a few.
Hope this helps! :)</span>
The answer is to learn to speak proper english hope this helps.
Examples are the
following:
<span>1. </span>Tessie
is upset (line 243) and repeats that the drawing isn’t fair (lines 259-260).
<span>2. </span>The Hutchins’s
household’s papers are collected and put back into the box (lines 261-262)
<span>3. </span>Each
member of the household draws another slip (lines 271-287).
This is a delightful and witty short story with that very Russian sense of the surreal combined with satire, that one sees in Bulgakov's writings (Bulgakov was an admirer of Gogol's work). I could go into all sorts of linguistic and psychological analysis of the symbolism of a man losing his nose, or I probably could if I knew Russian. But I suspect that rather misses the point. As the story says: Nonsense really does occur in this world, and, sometimes, nonsense altogether without an element of plausibility. I do not know what you can compare it with. Have you got any options? I think that you can get help with it if you check i tat the professional site. Prime Writings is the site with interesting blog on essay writing.
<span>A
pronoun is a word, which we use instead of a noun, usually to avoid
boring repetitions. For example, in the following sentence, I am going
to swap the word "pronouns" for the word "them", simply because you will
get bored if I fill each sentence with the word "pronoun". There are
various forms of them.
Subject pronouns: I, You, He, She, It, We, You, They
Object pronouns: Me, You, Him, Her, It, Us, You, Them
Possessive pronouns: Mine, Yours, His, Hers, Its, Ours, Yours, Theirs
Relative pronouns: Which, whose, that, where, when....etc...
I could go on, but I reckon you get the idea now. Ironically, the word "pronoun" is actually a noun.
So the answer yes
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