She used a shifting tone to convey the changes that Mrs. Mallard have gone through. She weeps immediately "with sudden, wild abandonment" , she even used the phrase storm of grief, and suspension of thought to show how sad and shocked she was. She showed how her thought process is changing. Using phrases such as "her pulses beat fast" and her eyes become "clean and bright". Proving that she is free. She didn't stay depressed. That's how she has done it.
We've had our share of lively debates in the field of reading, but not on this particular topic: background knowledge. There is a virtual consensus that background knowledge is essential for reading comprehension. Put simply, the more you know about a topic, the easier it is to read a text, understand it, and retain the information. Previous studies (Alexander, Kulikowich, & Schulze, 1994; Shapiro, 2004) have shown that background knowledge plays an enormous role in reading comprehension (Hirsch, 2003).
Answer: 4. What does the author mean-but not state directly?
Explanation:
The "Sweet hereafter" is the idiomatic way to refer to heave, so that explains why the correct answer is B <em>"A beautiful place the dead go, like heaven". </em>
In reference to the novel's title, we can see how this is related owing to the fact that the narrator is telling his story after an accident in which he almost die. We can think that his "sweet hereafter" is the second chance the world give him to not die and keep on living.