<u>Answer:
</u>
The detail from the text that best supports the answer to part A is "Dystopian authors argued that the pursuit of perfection will inevitably lead not to ‘no place’ but to a ‘bad place’, because of flaws within the system”
<u>Explanation:
</u>
- The Part A of the text speaks about the discipline of Dystopia.
- The given text exhibits a resemblance of meaning between the two as it progresses.
- It is through part A of the text itself that we get a crude idea of dystopia.
G and h>depends on the sentence
Answer and explanation:
The interior story, as the name suggests, is the story within another story. In this passage, the frame story is the speaker, Kevin, receiving a phone call from Matt, a friend he hasn't seen in almost ten years. The frame story is the one that involves the interior story. The interior story begins with the line '"Kevin, come inside!" my mother called.' This line separates the current moment from the moment the speaker is remembering - he and Matt playing outside; Kevin's mother calling him in. There is another story being told now, one about the past. But it is told as if it were happening at this moment. We have, from this moment on, an interior story.
The two things that Beowulf and the Odyssey have in common are the language in which they are told reflects the grandeur, nobility, and scope of the subject matter and they both follow the exploits of a single hero. The correct answers are D & B.