<u>Explanation:</u>
Remember, the English word foreshadowing refers to a brief detail or scene that shows something that will occur again in the future. Indeed, this was the case in "House Taken Over" by Julio Cortazar.
For example, in the story a foreshadow of a shift in the tone of the story begins when we read about Elvio;
“I went down the corridor as far as the oak door, which was ajar, then turned into the hall toward the kitchen, when <em>I heard something in the library or the dining room. The sound came through muted and indistinct, a chair being knocked over onto the carpet or the muffled buzzing of a conversation...</em>I heard it. ....toward the door. I hurled myself against the door before it was too late and shut it...I ran the great bolt into place, just to be safe.”
Interestingly, from that point on the house became taken over by strange noises. In the end, the siblings been fully frightened left their ancestral home, that is when the true meaning title of the story becomes clearer. Indeed, it became a "House Taken Over".
It is answer C. They didn't understand the test and probably didn't know what they got wrong and couldn't study.
Answer:
There are four parts in the GCA Narrative Assesslet.
Explanation:
GCA is the Georgia Center for Assessment and it gives educational instruction and assessment solutions for schools.
There are<u> four parts</u> in the English Language Arts Narrative Assesslets, which are one reading passage; three selected-response items; one constructed-response item; and finally, one extended constructed-response item.
Ummmmm I think 6 or 7... Hopefully im thinking of the same person