In the sentence pattern for asking questions, the subject is placed immediately after the operator (Operator [did, does, was] + Subject) while in the sentence pattern for making statements, the subject is placed before the verb phrase (Subject + VP). However, some statements may be in question form (You've already eaten?) and some questions (such as rhetorical ones) may be in statement form (Haven't you peed already?).
The answer is A Give me branliest
Answer:
B. A hero overcomes several obstacles to find his or her way back home.
Explanation:
<u>Out of all the answer options, a hero going back home through challenges is most likely an archetype.</u> While all other scenarios include tropes, t<u>hey are not traditional archetypes</u> that outline the vague story of many different narratives. Other options are more certain plots and fixed scenarios that are not that common in storytelling.
<u>Hero on a journey is a very common archetype in many narratives, traditional and contemporary.</u> The narratives with this trope usually involve a hero who has done some great deed and is r<u>eady to return to his home.</u> However, the journey is not over yet, and<u> he has more obstacles to face</u> – usually some kinds of monsters or moral challenges. When he does return, he is a changed person, victorious and glorious.
One of the most famous examples of this archetype is Odyssey and his return home to Ithaca after the Trojan war.
Answer:
Maycomb doesn't quite get Mr. Raymond. He's always drinking from a paper bag; he sits with the African-Americans; and Jem tells Scout and Dill that he's had several children with an African-American woman—even though he's from an old, rich family. (On the other hand, maybe being from an old, rich family allows him to live how he likes without worrying about what other people think.)
Later, Scout and Dill find out that Mr. Raymond does care about what other people think, but not in the way they expected. His paper bag turns out to be hiding not whisky but Coke, and his constant drunkenness is a put-on. There's a reason: "When I come to town, […] if I weave a little and drink out of this sack, folks can say Dolphus Raymond's in the clutches of whiskey—that's why he won't change his ways. He can't help himself, that's why he lives the way he does" (20.15).
Like Calpurnia speaking one language at home with the Finches and another at the African-American church, Mr. Raymond's double life shows Scout the compromises people have to make in order to live in communities where they don't quite fit in.
Explanation:
C. prepostion
a word governing, and usually preceding, a noun or pronoun and expressing a relation to another word or element in the clause, as in “the man on<span> the platform,” “she arrived </span>after<span> dinner,” “what did you do it </span>for<span> ?”</span>