<span>1. Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea = <u>Jules Verne</u>. (this French writer wrote this revolutionary 'sci-fi' novel back in 1870)
2. the resolving of the action = <u>denouement</u>. (it is a French word meaning a conclusion, something that explains everything in the end)
3. an extreme, unbelievable character = <u>caricature</u>. (often writers exaggerate a lot when they describe certain characters, usually to mock some of their flaws)
4. based on determinism = <u>naturalism</u>. (this literary era was all about determinism - meaning that we are not the rulers over our own lives, but rather that everything has already been determined for us, whether we like it or not)
5. a story or account = <u>narrative </u>(it is a piece of literature you write about something)
6. Canterbury Tales = <u>Geoffrey Chaucer</u> (a collection of 24 stories written somewhere in the 14th century)
7. War and Peace = <u>Leo Tolstoy </u>(a famous Russian author who wrote this lengthy novel in 1869 and is considered to be his masterpiece)
8. example of a novel of incidence = <u>Robinson Crusoe</u> (Crusoe is incidentally left alone on an island)
9. James Boswell = <u>Life of Johnson</u> (a biography about Dr. Samuel Johnson's life)</span>
Answer:
In chapter 16, after Miss Thomas has told Bud that he can stay with her and the band, she also tells him that she considers him "a godsend," and she tells Bud that he must "keep that in mind all of the time." This is obviously really important to Miss Thomas, and so she takes Bud by the arms
Answer:
Likewise hope you had a wonderful Christmas
Answer:
Taken from the ending part of the short story "The Black cat" by Edgar Allen Poe, the lines tell of the alcoholic protagonist's happiness in finding that the cat responsible for the incidental murder of his wife is nowhere to be seen in his house anymore.
Explanation:
Edgar Allen Poe's short story "The Black Cat" tells the story of an unnamed protagonist who is an alcoholic. His drunken act of killing his pet cat Pluto and then later on even his accidental murder of his wife leads to the situation he is in the start of he story- convicted to death.
The given excerpt is form the ending part of the story where he had successfully walled in his wife's corpse. He could't find the cat, he second pet cat, who had been the initial cause of the act. The lines show just how relieved he was to see that he could no longer find "<em>the monster</em>" in is house. But with this admission, he seems to be implying that he was free of the moral obligations in he society in general. This speech gave him he all clear in the murderous act, but which will in fact, return to haunt him and bring him to justice.