This question has the passage, but not the options with the specific quotations. I've found them online. They are the following:
Which quotation from the passage best supports the theme that looks can be deceiving?
A. "Once upon a time there was a prince who wanted to marry a princess; but she would have to be a real princess."
B. "There were princesses enough, but it was difficult to find out whether they were real ones. . . . So he came home again and was sad."
C. "One evening a terrible storm came on; there was thunder and lightning, and the rain poured down in torrents."
D. "The water ran down from her hair and clothes; it ran down into the toes of her shoes and out again at the heels."
Answer:
The quotation that best supports the theme that looks can be deceiving is:
D. "The water ran down from her hair and clothes; it ran down into the toes of her shoes and out again at the heels."
Explanation:
The princess who showed up at the prince's door does not look like a princess at all. The stereotypical image of a princess is pristine, flawless. This one is soaking wet, her hair and clothes most likely unkempt and dirty. However, this look is quite deceiving. Even though she does not look like one, she is indeed a real princess. That is what the queen finds out after having her sleep on top of twenty mattresses and twenty eider-beds. Princesses are sensitive, and this one is so much so that she was able to feel the lump of a pea that was under all those mattresses and eider-beds.
<span>It is raising a note and upholding a certain emotion of disgust to the doctor's behavior. This is achieved by the speaker's tone, use of words and the ethos. Moreover, ethos speaks of the character's credibility or the persuader's credibility of what he or she is asserting and positing, is it strong and bold or just a mere existent elaboration. Thus follows the characteristics on tone, logos and pathos. Ethos is one key to trusting since it presents one's consistency and as a reliable speaker. </span>
Fixed mindset and Growth mindset.
‘Fixed mindset’ as the name suggests is a state where a person believes that his abilities are fixed traits and which be changed. ‘Growth mindset’ on the other hand is a state where a person believes that his abilities can be changed and amplified through hard work and commitment.
Consider the following demonstration: since childhood I had a fixed mindset that I won’t ever be able to speak in front of a group of people because of my fear of public speaking. Because of this, I avoided speaking in elocution competitions despite being good at writing.
Now consider the next stage when my fixed mindset traits changed: After years of struggle and realization, it hit me that anybody can speak if one is confident enough. This stage of my life was called growth mindset when I even started taking parts in elocution competitions and even won the first prize in almost all the competitions.
You see, when fixed mindset of ‘I can’t do this’ changes to a growth mindset of ‘everything is possible’ great things begin to happen.
Hello!! The answer on plato is:
Each stanza provides a slightly different perspective of the woman reaping and singing in a field. The first sets the scene: a rustic vale, or valley, filled with the woman's voice. The second stanza compares her song to that of a cuckoo bird and a nightingale. Each bird is associated with a distant location—the Arabian sands and the "farthest" Hebrides. In the third stanza, the speaker wonders what the words of the song might be: Are they epic or personal? Are they about battles or the repeated sorrows of life? The last stanza describes how the reaper's song affected the speaker. He says the song will "have no ending" because it will stay in his memory.
This stanza structure helps express the theme of the natural beauty of a country woman's song, which is as good as or better than that of songbirds. Because he can't understand the words, the speaker listens to them in much the same way as he'd listen to a bird's song. As a field-worker, the woman also represents the value of someone whose art has developed without training. This quality echoes Wordsworth's belief in poetry that is accessible to people of all classes.
Answer:
The crowd love Katniss and Peeta; they go crazy screaming their names and throwing them gifts.