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NARA [144]
3 years ago
12

It was autumn in Venice when Victor first heard of Prosper and Bo. The canals, gleaming in the sun, dappled the ancient brickwor

k with gold. But the wind was blowing ice-cold air from the sea, reminding the Venetians that winter was approaching. Even the air in the alleyways tasted of snow, and only the wings of the carved angels and dragons high up on the rooftops felt any real warmth from the pale sun.
For the time being, the city still stood firmly on its wooden legs. Victor leaned against his window and looked out through the dusty glass. Surely no other place on earth was more proud of its beauty than Venice, and as he watched its spires and domes, each caught the sun as if trying to outshine one another. Whistling a tune, Victor turned away from the window and walked over to his large mirror. Just the weather for trying out my new disguise, he thought, as the sun warmed the back of his sturdy neck. He had bought this new treasure only the previous day—an enormous mustache, so dark and bushy that it would have made any self-respecting walrus extremely jealous. He stuck it carefully under his nose and stood on his toes to make himself taller. He turned to the left and to the right and became so engrossed in his reflection that he only heard the footsteps on the stairs when they stopped outside his door.
Clients. Blast! Why are they bothering me now of all times?
With a deep sigh he sat behind his desk. He heard voices whispering outside his door. They're probably admiring my nameplate, Victor thought. It was a handsome, shiny black sign with his name engraved in gold letters:

Victor Getz
Private Detective
Investigations of Any Kind
adapted from The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke

Which of the following statements is an example of foreshadowing?
Group of answer choices

"Victor leaned against his window and looked out through the dusty glass."

"Just the weather for trying out my new disguise, he thought. . . ."

"They're probably admiring my nameplate, Victor thought."

"But the wind was blowing ice-cold air from the sea. . . ."
English
1 answer:
Alexxandr [17]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

C. "Just the weather for trying out my new disguise, he thought. . . ."

Explanation:

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Answer:Bradstreet was born in England to a Puritan family. Her father, Thomas Dudley, was steward to the Earl of Lincoln, a leading nonconformist in the religious strife of England. Because of her father's high position and the availability of the Earl's extensive library, Bradstreet's education was unusually comprehensive for a woman of her time. In 1630 she moved with her husband and her parents to the Massachusetts Bay Colony, where her husband and her father served as governors of the settlement. As a New England colonist, Bradstreet encountered a life of hardship to which she was unaccustomed. In 1647 her brother-in-law returned to England, taking with him the manuscript of Bradstreet's poems. He published them without her knowledge, entitling the collection The Tenth Muse (1650). The volume met with immediate success in London. Surprised by the work's reception, but unhappy with its unpolished state, Bradstreet undertook to revise the poems, some of which were lost in the fire that destroyed the Bradstreet home in 1666. Six years after her death the revisions and some new poems were published under the title Several Poems. Bradstreet's prose meditations and later poems did not appear in print until 1867.

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Explanation:

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