Answer:
A. Details that the author uses to create a feeling about the setting:
The wind blows so hard that seems like it could flake away their identities. The martian air seems able to draw their souls away,
to dissolve the intellect and burn away their past. The hills are characterized as having been under the crushing pressure of time, and old cities are described as similar to children's bones.
Explanation:
B.
The author creates a negative feeling about the setting through the use of images and metaphors that are macabre and unsettling, such as an environment that can take away their identities, their souls, their intellect, and even their past. The reference to children's bones is probably the most unsettling element and the one that makes it clear that the setting is not a welcoming one.
Answer:
The answer here is C, A type of story that contains facts about real people, places, and events, but also contains fictional elements that add dramatic interest to the story.
Explanation:
Historical fiction uses history as a way to make interesting fictional stories. To be considered historical fiction it has to include some type of real history, whether it be a place, person, or thing, and it has to have some sort of fiction in it.
A foil in literature describes a character who contrasts with another character in order to make comparisons and highlight certain traits between these two persons.
Both Melantho and Eurycleia are servants of Odysseus. While Melantho is unloyal, (sleeping with the suitors while Odysseus is away) and treating him rudely when he returns disguised as a beggar, Eurycleia remains devoted and kind. Melantho is used as a foil for Eurycleia to showcase her good traits.
Hi again☺
I believe it is the last choice, "and dares to claim the sky..."
It shows that the bird has a daring, or brave character.
~Elisabeth