I think is c for number one and d for number two
Answer:
B. A part of Jayden wished that he could stay in the sky forever, but he knew that wasn’t possible.
Answer:
Mr. Hundert in Ethan Canin's The Palace Thief actually changes significantly for the worse before he changes for the better at the end of the story.
When we first meet Mr. Hundert, he is a young history teacher at St. Benedict's, still intent upon introducing his students to the “lofty ideals” of the ancients, hoping to inspire the boys as well as “temper their ambition with humility.” However, the high ideals Mr. Hundert holds for himself are shattered when he encounters the stubborn corruption of Sedgewick Bell.
Sedgewick is rude and arrogant, and for a while, Mr. Hundert tries to find a balance between correcting him and encouraging him. Then the annual Mr. Julius Caesar competition approaches, and Mr. Hundert makes his first big mistake. He submits Sedgewick for the competition rather than a better-qualified boy. His motive seems honorable, for he wants to further encourage Sedgewick, but his actions are not fair. Mr. Hundert is beginning to descend from his high ideals.
Explanation:
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: "Assume that you are talking about tribal dominances in India, then it has <span>almost become gospel amongst the scholars world over to discuss the historiography of India in terms of binaries such as (1) center and margin vis-à-vis centrality & marginality, (2) placed & displaced, (3)e</span><span>lites & dalits, (4) tribal & non-tribal. Thereby to establish that Indian cultural traditions & mega narratives could never assess & integrate the mass articulation comprising the voice of the ethnic minorities, especially the dislocated communities.</span>
I would say it is B because that is the analogy