Answer:
1 Cute: Attractive in a pretty or endearing way.Pretty: Attractive in a delicate way without being truly beautiful or handsome. Beautiful: Pleasing the senses or mind aesthetically.
2. There's a difference between pretty and beautiful. When someone is pretty, the person has a good appearance, but when someone is beautiful, the person shines on the inside and out. The words “beautiful”, “pretty” and “handsome” all describe something which looks good. Cute: Attractive in a pretty or endearing way.
Explanation:
Answer:
The first sentence refers to Daisy: the sole and intense purpose of Gatsby's existence. She represents that thing "beyond the stars" that Gatsby aspires to. His entire adult life has been devoted to becoming the kind of man he thought would be worthy for Daisy to marry. Daisy's family was wealthy and socially respectable; Gatsby came from nothing. Their youthful love affair ended in tragedy because Daisy felt she couldn't marry someone with no money or social standing. In becoming wealthy and socially viable, Gatsby also became decadent. The "purposeless splendor" of his lifestyle is revealed to be far deeper and more significant, as Nick realizes Gatsby's singular purpose is to win back Daisy. In Nick's eyes, this makes Gatsby even more impressive and admirable, because Gatsby represents chivalry and romance in a decadent modern age.
C. Douglass felt resentment against slave owners, and with using words such as loathed, meanest, wicked, persuades the reader to feel negatively about slave owners.
macbeth has doubts on killing duncan and doesnt want to.