Given in the story, she says how the doors contain the fate of the young man and as much as she had to she couldn't tell the young man which door to choose knowing it could kill him or her(knowing the thought(metaphoracally talking))
Answer:
Choose the best option to complete the rules: (1,0) I use the Simple Present for <u>repetition, habit or generalization.</u> Typical signal words for the Simple Present are <u>now, then, never, normally, occasionally rarely, seldom, often, sometimes, usually</u>. I use <u>do not</u> to form the negative. The verb be can have three forms in the Simple Present: <u>am, is, are</u>
Explanation:
The simple present tense or also known as the present simple or present indefinite is a a verb tense that is used to express repetition, show or describe a habit, or used to generalize things.
The simple present can also be used to talk about actions that can happen in the near future and also actions that are happening now. The simple present tense is the base form of the verb.
Examples of present simple: I eat everyday, showing a habit; I normally take a walk in the evening, also expressing a habit and shows a repeated action that occurs every evening; Goats eat grass, gives a generalization that it is a fact that is true and will always be true.
Questions in the present tense are made with ''be'' and the negative form with ''do not''. Example: Do you go to the mall everyday? You do not run always.
Marlow is rather ambiguous in his work Doctor Faustus when it comes to fate and free will.
On one hand, it is implied that Faustus has the opportunity to choose his own destiny, to make the appropriate decision, repent for his sins, and then he will be saved. One of the angels tells him the following:
<em>"Faustus, repent yet, God will pity thee." </em>(Act II Scene III)
On the other hand, however, it is implied several times throughout the work that Faustus's decisions don't really matter - his life was preordained, meaning that destiny chooses what happens with him and his life. This leads us to believe that regardless of his desires, Faustus would always go down the 'evil' path because ultimately that wasn't even his decision - it was what destiny picked for him.