I believe that's false because the <span>simple predicate of a sentence is the main verb, so it tells you what is being done in the sentence not who it's about. </span>
I will write a kind of template for you to follow, you have to think about your favorite villain and why you like him/her/it so much, it is not hard at all!
{Introduction}
In this essay, we will be discussing the psychological traits and motivations of [name of the villain], the main villain in [name of saga/story/movie/video game ] who antagonizes against [name of the hero], on top of that, we will be comparing the villain and the hero.
{Body}
[Here you have to describe the villain and then compare them to the hero, in one paragraph you can describe the villain, the second you can describe the hero and in the third compare them, remember to get some pqassages, like things they say to support your reasoning]
{Conclusion}
In conclusion, we can see that... [remember to quickly recaptulate your arguments and then come with a conclusion, something like: do the hero and villain need to coexist? Can they ever work together (again if they have already worked together)? Can they reconcile? How evil is the villain? Is he/she the real villain? and etc ]
I think it would be D not for sure hope this and if it is wrong sorry
Astronot - Astronaut
Intermision - Intermission
Other’s are correct