Answer:
ur answer friend
Explanation:
1. Plural
2. Plural
3. Plural
4. Singular
5. Singular
6. Plural
7. Plural
8. Singular
Thats your answer good night
1. The story revolves around Buck's point of view which I felt gave more insight into Buck and allowed me to experience what Buck was thinking and feeling. If it was from the trainer I believe Buck would have been just a side character I don't give much thought to or know too much about.
2. Yes, there are many life lessons you can learn from this story. An example of this is friendship.
3. I feel that it lets me compare them and decide that yeah maybe at first I thought he was good, but after reading about the other two I decided he is not the best one out of the three.
4. I feel like they are exaggerated I felt like some of the aspects of these characters were unrealistic. These characters could seem like real people but there is so much about them that seems exaggerated which makes it seem unreal.
5. By the tone and how the passage is leading up to what it is.
6. No, I knew it was coming sooner or later. I was surprised by what did it though.
Answer:
The meaning of chapter titles in The Call of the Wild extends beyond a simple description of the plot. The first chapter, “Into the Primitive,” is concerned not only with Buck’s departure from civilization and his entrance into a more savage, primitive world but also with the contrast between civilized life and primitive life. This contrast is strong throughout the novel, and the story of Buck’s adventures in the Klondike is largely the story of how he gradually sheds all the customs that define his earlier life in human society to become a creature of the wild, primal world of the north. Here, in the first days after his kidnapping, he takes the first steps away from his old life and toward a new one.
Hope this helped!
Explanation:
Answer:
Dickinson began writing as a teenager. Her early influences include Leonard Humphrey, principal of Amherst Academy, and a family friend named Benjamin Franklin Newton, who sent Dickinson a book of poetry by Ralph Waldo Emerson. ... Dickinson's seclusion during her later years has been the object of much speculation.
Explanation:
I think you are talking about this You were not really spicific about this question Hope I am right
Assumptions are practically guesses. You presume (or guess) what is going to happen or what did happen. View points, on the other hand, are things that have already happened, and you have made up your mind on your stance of the thing. i would go with D)