<u>Explanation:</u>
Remember, the English word foreshadowing refers to a brief detail or scene that shows something that will occur again in the future. Indeed, this was the case in "House Taken Over" by Julio Cortazar.
For example, in the story a foreshadow of a shift in the tone of the story begins when we read about Elvio;
“I went down the corridor as far as the oak door, which was ajar, then turned into the hall toward the kitchen, when <em>I heard something in the library or the dining room. The sound came through muted and indistinct, a chair being knocked over onto the carpet or the muffled buzzing of a conversation...</em>I heard it. ....toward the door. I hurled myself against the door before it was too late and shut it...I ran the great bolt into place, just to be safe.”
Interestingly, from that point on the house became taken over by strange noises. In the end, the siblings been fully frightened left their ancestral home, that is when the true meaning title of the story becomes clearer. Indeed, it became a "House Taken Over".
Answer:
a.
Puritans believed it was by God's provision of protection that they survived the incidence that happen them.
b. Simple and Direct
Explanation:
This excerpt from Of Plymouth Plantation show the influence of religion in early American literature because Puritans believed it was by God's provision of protection that they survived the incidence that happen them.
The writing style of many works of Puritan literature was Simple and Direct because
Puritan literature based solely on a religious, rather than an entertainment, theme which was why Puritans didn't believe in writing for entertainment but rather preferred they thought of writing as a tool to reach people with the story of God.
Answer:
A quote or citation is a literal statement made by someone, quoted by someone else. Quoting differs from paraphrasing in that the latter form reflects ideas of others in their own words (the idea is maintained, but the form is different from quoting).
When citing phrases, your own text should be written in such a way that the quote is seamlessly integrated. If that is not entirely successful without, for example, moving a verb from the quotation or putting it in a different tense, then this operation should be marked by putting the word between square brackets. If something from the quoted part is not quoted, the omission must be marked with an ellipsis: three dots between round brackets.
Answer:
Idiom
Explanation:
"Her heart sank" is an idiom. An idiom is a figure of speech that is a commonly used phrase but can't be interpreted literally.