The evidence that shows the difference in what helps the characters in Animals in the Zoo and Winter Driving overcome their fear is option C which is In Animals in the Zoo, Ryan takes comfort in visiting all the interesting animals at the zoo. In Winter Driving, Jesper watches the road closely and drives slowly.
<h3>What is an excerpt?</h3>
An excerpt refer to words, statements or phrases that is extracted or deduced from a paragraph which has meaning and passes information.
Therefore, The evidence that shows the difference in what helps the characters in Animals in the Zoo and Winter Driving overcome their fear is option C because from the excerpts you will see how the characters involved were able to overcome fear by applying different strategy.
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Answer:
Explanation:
What is pathos? is the question. Pathos is a noun and it is singular.
Pathos is a literary device ( a type of writing if you will) that stirs up feelings of the listener/reader/audience which include pity, sympathy, and sorrow. It is an emotional appeal rather than a logical one.
Answer and Explanation:
Even though your question does not mention the book or story which it concerns, we may assume it is about the short story "Cathedral" by Raymond Carver, since the three characters in the story are the narrator, his wife, and her blind friend.
The narrator's initial feelings toward the blind man, Robert, are permeated with prejudice. He sees himself as superior simply because he can "see". He thinks of Robert as an incomplete man, a man who cannot be happy nor make a woman happy. He treats Robert as if his presence were an nuisance, as if a blind man were the worst company one could have. He also thinks it is an absurd for Robert to have a full beard and not wear dark sunglasses, just like a normal non-blind person.
We can quickly tell the one who truly has an impairment is the narrator himself. He certainly can see with his eyes; he is not physically blind. But he cannot go beyond that. He does not truly "see". Robert knows the narrator's wife much better than the narrator does. Robert sees more, because he listens, because he learns, because he is willing to not judge. The narrator's relationship with other people and even himself is one of appearances, shallow and judgmental.