Answer and Explanation:
Let's talk about Fortunato's name. What does it remind you of?
The name "Fortunato" reminds me of the word "fortune".
If you met someone named Fortunato, you would expect this person to be...what?
Fortune has two meanings. It can refer to luck or to wealth. Therefore, if I met someone named Fortunato, I would expect this person to be lucky or rich. I would expect him to have a happy life.
I believe this question is connected to the short story "The Cask of Amontillado", by author Edgar Allan Poe. It is ironic that the character Fortunato should have such a name, since he is being taken by his very friend, Montresor, to be buried alive.
2. Hasn’t heard
3. How many times HAVE you TAKEN it?
4. Lost
5. I HAVE already BOUGHT them
6. Hasn’t gotten
7. They HAVE never TRIED it
8. Who HAS he INVITED?
9. Wrote
10. Yes, HAS he LOST weight?
11. Broke
12. Haven’t seen
Answer:
The parallelism between Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein" and the story of Adam and Eve told in the book of Genesis relies on the fact that Victor creates life just as God did. The answer is Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground and Victor saw "the dull yellow eye of the creature open; it brethed hard". Besides, both creations had the need of a companion.
Explanation:
Explanation:
you didn't put a poem.,.............
The answer is a simile. This is because similes compare two things (these things here are his life and the dusty yards) by using like or as (specifically here as).
The other ones don't make sense: nothing is being over exaggerated (hyperbole), there are no repeating consonants (alliteration), and there are no human characteristics being given to inhuman subjects (personification).