The tone of a story is related to the point of view of a story by; Choice C; The tone of a story tells who is telling a story.
<h3>In what way does the tone relate to the point of view of a story?</h3>
The tone of a story implicitly describes the author's point of view regarding the story. On this note, it follows from inference that the tone of the story gives the reader an insight as to who the author telling the story is.
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This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Based on the 1925 serum run to Nome
Describe what made the terrain around Nome perilous? How did this contribute to the heroism of the dog teams?
Answer:
Located in the Alaskan tundra, the route to Nome crossed a 5000-foot mountain peak and the unstable ice of Norton Sound, ill-famed for breaking under pressure. Furthermore, the sea was frozen for seven months during the winter, meaning that dog sleds were the only way of transportation at the time. In addition to that, the “Great Race of Mercy” happened in the middle of a great storm.
Explanation:
All of these elements made the five days journey to get the serum required to save Nome (which should have taken a month) that much more heroic.
I'm not understanding the question can you add to it or something.
I think what is trying to say is that why did the sailors at that time have more reasonable fears then nowadays about exploring. The saliors didnt have the have advanced technonlogy that we have to go somewhere and know where we are going and what lay ahead of us in that direction. The question also wants you to connect it to find evidence that will back up your answer into why are the fears they had acceptable to them unlike today.