Answer: herere
Explanation:
There are twelve steps to the hero's journey, and each step falls into one of three stages. Stage 1: Departure - This includes steps 1, 2, 3, and 4. During this stage, the hero is preparing for his quest.
Two years ago that were a boy name loran, him and his friends went to a forest just to camp and to see the world and the animals that are there, loran fall asleep and his friends went somewhere, loran woke up and didn’t saw anyone, he didn’t know where to go, he was yelling their names, and they answered him back, they said that they left because they saw an scary animal, they get back to their tents and fall asleep again, after few hours of sleeping it was 3am. It was really scary they heard a lot if wolfs out of their tents, they couldn’t go anywhere, so they were just sitting there all quiet, when they didn’t hear any wolfs they ran back home.
I'd say the answer is B. From what I know on archetypes, they're basically stereotypes. For instance, in a movie the classic jock would be an archetype because not all jocks are what movies make them out to be. This can be used with any other stereotypical character as well.
Answer:
<h3>husband would turn into a beast like a werewolf because of the cursed bloodline in the family</h3>
Explanation:
The assumption about the change in the characters which I had made was that the <u>husband would turn into a beast like a werewolf because of the cursed bloodline in the family.</u>
Since no exact detail was given at the beginning of the story about what the husband would look like once changed, I <u>assumed that he would change into a pale beast with large body. </u>
The assumption was inferred upon through these lines "He was white all over then, like a worm’s skin. And he turned his face. It was changing while I looked, it got flatter and flatter, the mouth flat and wide, and the teeth grinning flat and dull, and the nose just a knob of flesh with nostril holes, and the ears gone, and the eyes gone blue — blue, with white rims around the blue — staring at me out of that flat, soft, white face."