The element of a personal narrative that would be best for Nick to include next is:
A. a precise description of what the writer is witnessing when he says that he "could scarcely believe what [his] eyes were seeing."
- This question is missing the paragraph that provides the context to be answered. I have found it online and attached it.
- As we can see in the attached file, Nick's narrative, so far, has ended in <u>suspense</u>. Readers know there is something going on, but they do not know what it is.
- Nick was lost in reflection when the animals began to make a lot of noise. <u>He can't even believe what he is seeing!</u> So what comes next?
- Nick should now tell readers what he is seeing, giving a precise description that will quench readers' curiosity. This means letter A is the correct option.
- <u>Letter B would be pointless</u>, since adding a line saying the <u>same thing</u> the narrator has just said would provide nothing new.
- <u>Letter C </u>would be important, but not at this moment. It is more like a <u>conclusion</u> or <u>resolution</u>, after everything is done.
- <u>Letter D is also pointless</u>. We already know the point of view is in first person. The whole paragraph is narrated using first-person pronouns.
Learn more about this topic here:
brainly.com/question/75925?referrer=searchResults
The answer is C. a comparison of two things that does not use like or as; for example, "Her eyes are blue pools"
The two parts of the excerpt that shows the central character is devoutly religious and God-fearing are:
"The man therefore read it, and looking upon Evangelist very carefully, said, Whither must I fly?" This shows that the central character is willing to go the path that Evangelist advises him to, it's something that he feels he wants and must do.
"Then said Evangelist, 'Keep that light in your eye, and go up directly thereto: so shalt thou see the gate; at which, when thou knockest, it shall be told thee what thou shalt do.'" This shows that the central character is willing to follow Evangelist's instruction because of both the character's name and where he is saying he should head.
Answer:
b) by noticing how the character interacts with other characters
c) by noticing details about what the character says, does, and thinks
d) by noticing how the other characters perceive the character
e) by noticing the context, and use it to make inferences about the character
Explanation:
Indirect characterization is a technique used in writing to convey information about a character without directly revealing those qualities. Instead of describing a character directly, the author shows what that character is like through what that character says, thinks, looks like, and how other characters react to that character.
Answer:
It's not money, it feeling- you don't feel anything and we feel too violently