Please include the options in your question.
Answer:
My name is ___ I like to read.
I like playing basketball with my friends on rainy days.
My friend like pizza sushi and burritos.
My name is ___ , I like to read.
I like playing basketball with my friends, on rainy days.
My friend like pizza, sushi and burritos.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
We didn’t ask about the author’s favorite food. This is about diet myths.
Answer:
the alarm clock goes off at 6am
Explanation:
makes sense
Despite the narrator’s profusion of animistic (animal-like), humanistic (manlike), and deistic (godlike) characterizations of nature, Crane makes clear that nature is ultimately indifferent to the plight of man, possessing no consciousness that we can understand. As the stranded men progress through the story, the reality of nature’s lack of concern for them becomes increasingly clear. The narrator highlights this development by changing the way he describes the sea. Early in the story, the sea snarls, hisses, and bucks like a bronco; later, it merely “paces to and fro,” no longer an actor in the men’s drama. In reality, the sea does not change at all; only the men’s perception of the sea changes. The unaltered activity of the gulls, clouds, and tides illustrates that nature does not behave any differently in light of the men’s struggle to survive.