<span>a. Argue for or against the limitation of speed limits.</span>
B for the first question and C for the second
Answer:
The exposition of "The Outsiders" reveals the main character of the story, Ponyboy and his friend group 'Greasers' and his rival group 'Socs.'
In resolution, the readers come to know about the reality of the story. Ponyboy was writing his English assignment that his teacher gave.
The similarities between exposition and resolution is that the characters and setting are same as in the beginning and ending of the story.
Explanation:
The exposition of a story is the introduction in which the characters and settings are introduced.
In the exposition of the novel "The Outsiders" the characters and the setting is introduced. The narrator of the story is a boy named Ponyboy. In the exposition, readers are introduced to Ponyboy and his group of friends, and they call themselves 'Greasers.' The rival group of Greasers were also introduced, that is, 'Socs.'
The resolution is the ending of the story in which all conflicts are resolved.
In the resolution of the novel, not only the conflicts are resolved but the readers come to the light that the whole novel was nothing but Ponyboy's English assignment that his teacher gave him. In the resolution, when Ponyboy writes "When I stepped out into the bright sunlight from the darkness of the moviehouse" the readers can also imagine themselves coming out into the bright sunlight from the imagination of Ponyboy.
The similarities that both the exposition and the resolution shares is that the setting and the characters are same. In exposition the story began with Ponyboy waiting outside the moviehouse and in resolution also we see him in the same setting.
In <em>A Raisin in the Sun</em>, Ruth has several internal conflicts. She and her husband are not well economically, and she even wonders if she should have an abortion because they cannot support their son Travis. What helps solve one of her internal conflicts is the new house, since it represents a hope for a better future.
The correct answer is "the desire of wise men".
In her play "Frankenstein" (1823), Mary Shelley uses different syntactic strategies in order to put emphasis on certain information. For example, she could have written something like this: "within my grasp is the study and desire of the wisest men...".
Instead, she chose to present the information in a rhetorical way. She introduced the "wh" word "what" opening the window for the reader to question himself what is the meaning of "what"?
What is THAT THING that had been the study and desire of wisest men since the creation of the world? What did they want to know?