Answer:
In "The Lady or the Tiger," the door that bothers the princess the most is the one which has the lady behind. The reason is that the princess hates the lady because she is very beautiful. Besides, when the lady spoke to the princess' lover, they smiled at each other, so the princess is paranoid about her lover falling in love with the lady more than being killed by a tiger.
Answer: A.
:)
Explanation: He is considerate. He is selfish. He lacks confidence.
Answer:
"O miserable abundance, O beggarly riches!" – John Donne ➡️ Oxymoron
"What a pity that youth must be wasted on the young." – George Bernard Shaw ➡️Paradox
Explanation:
The literary devices are oxymoron and paradox.
Oxymoron is known as a rhetoric device which is usually self-contradicting; the words seem to contradict each other.
Like the sentence: "O miserable abundance, O beggarly riches!", An abundance that is miserable is self-contradictory. "Beggarly" means that there is lack and poverty. But yet riches is attached. So, it's an oxymoron.
Paradox is known to be a logically self-contradictory statement. It tends to go against common sense but yet somehow it looks true.
The sentence: "What a pity that youth must be wasted on the young." - youth has to do with being young but yet the statement says it is wasted on the young; that's self-contradictory but can be true.
Answer:
I would talk to my friend and try to come to an agreement so that he or she would pay half the repairs the sofa would need.
Explanation:
Although animals are unpredictable and my friend is not to blame for the damage his cat did to my sofa, the cat is my friend's responsibility, just as it was my responsibility to look at what the cat was doing and prevent him from destroying anything .
As we cannot charge the cat to pay for the damages it caused, the best option would be to enter into an agreement with my friend and ask him to pay half the repair that his cat caused.
The correct answer among all the other choices is C. motif. Juliet's many references to flowers are an example of Shakespeare's use of motif. Thank you for posting your question. I hope that this answer helped you. Let me know if you need more help.