Answer:
Explanation:
Snape became a death eater because he wanted to become one and Voldemort in turn saw no reason to deny him what he wanted. ... During the Hogwarts time, he is closed with some futuer Death Eaters in Slytherin, and Snape himself is very intrested in dark magic, so he is kind of born to be a Death Eater. He was a genuine Death Eater for around 18 months, give or take, and then a fake one for years. Dumbledore, aware that Voldemort had ordered Draco to kill him, had asked Snape to kill him instead as a way of sparing the boy's soul and of preventing his own otherwise slow, painful death. Snape was Dumbledore's man from the moment Lily was murdered. Over the years he did whatever he could to try to make up for his past as a Death Eater, and he followed Dumbledore – for the most part – without question. But when the headmaster of Hogwarts revealed Harry's true fate, Snape's reaction was not unlike ours.
1. Hurts the person getting bullied (suicide)
2. Can get in trouble with the law (harassment)
3. Can affect the way people think about you
You write the answer like this 430,825
Answer:
The best answer to the question: Clara chose this excerpt to help support her interpretation of "The Caged Bird" because it has an extended metaphor that examines:___, would be: suffering.
Explanation:
"I Sit and Look Out" is a poem that was written by Walt Whitman and which makes part of the larger collection Leaves of Grass, published in 1900. This text speaks about the sufferings that the speaker sees in the world, as he does nothing more than observe such misery. "The Caged Bird", on the other hand, is a poem that was written by Maya Angelou, and it describes the life of a caged bird, its sadness and misery, the suffering the caged animal goes through, in comparisson with its counterpart that lives free. In both cases, we see one common denominator, and that is suffering, on one side, the suffering of so many people, and in the second, the silent suffering of a small bird that lives in a cage. This is why Clara could use Walt Whitman´s poem, and especially an excerpt of it, to analyzse Maya Angelou´s own poem; because both are related by the topic of suffering.
Answer 1. B.
Answer 2. B.
Answer 3. B
Answer 4. A