Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
I think the penalty given to Mr Toad was justified because he did very violent acts without caring for other people. This is evident in the text in the part there Mr Toad escape the jail with the washingwomen's cloth on, and when he steals the motorcycle in the restaurant.
Answer: I'd probably go with D
Explanation: Out of all the heroes I've seen, most of them are trying to avenge someone. Typically family(Father to be specific).
Answer:
State who you want to be, why you want be him/her, how they inspire you, probably should name their achievement, and how you are gonna be like them.
Explanation:
Answer:
In Guy de Maupassant’s The Necklace the author utilizes a third person narrator who possesses a limited omniscience (1010). This narrator is exposed through the fact that there is never an “I” in the story. It seems as though the story is being told in retrospect, by on who has some connection to each and every character in the story. This is evidenced in the very beginning of the book where Maupassant writes, “She dressed plainly because she could not dress well, but she was as unhappy as though she had really fallen from her proper station…” (524). The narrator is obviously in tune with the feelings o Mme. Loisel, beyond that of a bystander, which would suggest an omniscience to some extent. However, the narrator seems unable at times to examine the thoughts or feelings of a specific character. When Mme. Forestier meets Mme. Loisel after years of hard work have faded Mme. Loisel’s beauty, there is no discussion of her surprise or inner thoughts, merely the words that were spoken (529). Therefore, there is but limited omniscience, which is used chiefly (although not always) on Mme. Loisel. This selection of which character’s mind to pry into is sound, as Mme. Loisel is the main character whom the story revolves around.
In choosing a third person, limited omniscience narrator, Maupassant grants the reader a deeper insight into the characters than a narrator who is only concerned with the facts. “She had no dresses, no jewels, nothing. And she loved nothing but that; she felt made for that” (524). This knowledge essentially sets the stage for things to come, without it we would lack understanding of what in Mme. Loisel’s character drives her life.
Even though insight into a character’s mind is enlightening, without leaving parts of a character to he imagination, the reader may not feel as though they have been given a fair chance to imagine the character. Maupassant does a good job in informing us of necessary information while still giving free reign to the imagination.
Explanation:
Answer:
Using the baby plays into a human instinct to protect young children from harm.
Explanation:
Smoking is an unhealthy habit that does not only affect smokers but those around them as well. The effect smoking has on health and its consequences are usually not enough to get people to give up this habit, as many simply ignore the warnings shown on the cigarette packaging. The given poster uses a different approach - it reminds people that smoking is harmful not only to them but children surrounding them, too. Being protective over children is a part of human nature, and the creator of the poster relies on that instinct.