Answer:
He expresses sarcastic feelings, full of irony.
Explanation:
Luis doesn't like the junkyard that his father wants him to work for. This is a family business, but Luis thinks it is a demotivating and shameful job, which does not fit him and will limit the opportunities that life can offer him. For this reason, he quips, when his father says that the junkyard is also his, using the familiar phrase “Someday, son, all this will be yours” in a sarcastic and playful way.
Answer:
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Answer:
The answer is Option B: "The narrator declares that he will die but the reader does not know why."
Explanation:
In the passage from "The Black Cat," Edgar Allan Poe claims that he will die tomorrow and he needs to unburden his soul regarding some regular household events that are terrifying to him. He says the event is unbelievable but that he is not crazy. He states there may be someone else who can explain what happened more calmly and concretely so that it might not seem to wild and dream-like as he feels it is. The author is about to start telling us about what happened that led to his death, or at least that is what is implied in this passage.