Answer:
The theme this passage best supports is:
B. Appearances shape people's opinions.
Explanation:
Let's work with elimination to answer this question. Options C and D can be eliminated simply because they do not present themes. They are related to the passage, but they summarize or conclude it instead. Themes are underlying ideas.
<u>We are now left with options A and B. Option A may have something to do with the novel, but not with this particular passage. The focus here is on how Poole judges the man he saw because of his appearance. He calls him a "dwarf" and a "thing", while saying Dr. Jekyll "is a tall, fine build of a man." The passage does not mention anything else that leads Poole to judge Mr. Hyde besides his appearance, more specifically his height. Therefore, we can easily see that the theme here concerns how appearances shape people's opinions.</u>
Answer: Asegual Reproduction
Explanation: A reproductive process that involves only one parent and produces offspring that are genetically identical to the parent.
The central theme of Emerson's essay "Nature" is the harmony that exists between the natural world and human beings. In "Nature", Ralph Waldo Emerson contends that man should rid himself of material cares and enjoy an original relation with the universe and experience what he calls "the sublime."
Imma go with C. or D.
I may not be correct.. But
I Hoped I helped!
~ Sequoyah :-)
<span>4. Archetypes are a type of foreshadowing that appears throughout history.
8. A short stories takes a series of completely ordinary events and develops them into a character study is “Young Goodman Brown”.
14. The characters would be considered an archetype is Funny sidekick Student
17. A character that is depicted realistically and has his or her own personality and history in a story is Representative
20. Foreshadowing is not considered a level of setting in a story?
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