1. T
2. F
3. T
4. F
5. I don't know, sorry. I personally feel that you can be born one and just not know it until something happens in your life where it kind of comes out and makes itself known.
A little explanation for the answers besides 5- Look at what happened in Columbine. Even though it happened over 20 years ago, both Dylan and Eric still have a good sized fan base. Those who look up to them somehow connect with them on a personal level, given their history, the true event and so on. For 4 however, I think pretty much everyone has a personal definition of a psychopath and it if you do get diagnosed with psychopathy, it can vary from person to person.
Answer:
Miss: to fail to hit something or to long for something. Leave: to go away from...
Explanation:
The bassoon failed to eat the lobster, hence the scratch marks.
Answer:
Mrs. Hutchinson really wanted to stop being trapped in a world where she couldn't change anything, where the Lottery was something as natural as day or night, and she was already tired of being a woman who always struggled to fit into that society. She didn't want to follow the rules, but she was a rebellious person inside, and perhaps for her the only way to escape was to die. Although she seems abnegated and peaceful, she actually thinks that the Lottery is unfair and even its late the Lotttery's day. Tess Hutchinson wants to end all that, even dying. It is also logical to think that she succeeded.
Explanation:
Answer:
sullen
Explanation:
Sullen can be defined as bad-tempered and sulky; gloomy.
Answer:
1: B. The sound of ringing bells
2: B. Elegiac
4: B. The transformative nature of death
5: B. To undergo
Explanation:
This poem's title will be best titled the transformative nature of death. The poem reveals what happens to the dead in the grave. Also, the sad effect of the poem makes it elegiac - the ringing of the knell confirms it.