Is there a picture? For the gate den
Answer:
A. The connotation suggests that the narrator is annoyed by indicating that the counselor is being too aggressive in her questioning.
Explanation:
There are two types of meaning a word possesses:
- Denotation - explicit or literal meaning;
- Connotation - an emotional or cultural association that a word carries.
When someone is pushy, they are constantly trying to get something or to make someone do something. Such behavior often makes other people annoyed. So, the narrator is also annoyed, which is confirmed by the second sentence: <em>I didn't realize that thinking about my future could be such a chore</em>.
Thus, the correct option is A.
This comes from the novel “<em><u>Things Fall Apart</u></em>” written by <u>Chinua Achebe. </u>It is the story of the strong and proud Okonkwo, who could not deal with the changes the white missionaries brought to his village. Ikemefuna was ill-fated because he was destined to be killed by Okonkwo and Unoka was ill-fated because he was despised by his son Okonkwo and died in debt.
Question: Which two characters does Achebe describe as being “ill-fated” in Things Fall Apart.
Answer: c.) Ikemefuna and Unoka
Answer: Yes.
Explanation:
This is all my personal opinion.
Winning shows reward when putting effort. With all the trials and tribulences of a competitive sport, winning is the cherry on top. Like life, everyone goes through challenges, and push through it to have their ups. And then downs. Losing is inevitable. In a competitive sport, you're bound to lose a match. Losing teaches us humility, knowing when you've been beat, and always coming back up to go for a win again.
Hope I didn't go that deep. Good day!
<em>Answer:</em>
<em>Who is the speaker of the poem O Captain My Captain?
</em>
<em>That suggests to me that the speaker in that poem is Whitman himself. Reynolds appears to share this view (emphasis mine): In Whitman's best-known poems about Lincoln, "O Captain! My Captain!" and "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd," the silencing of his former poetic self is noticeable.</em>
<em>Explanation:</em>