Answer:
Fortunato's dress foreshadows his being a fool or buffoon.
Explanation:
Edgar Allen Poe's short story "The Cask of Amontillado" is about Montresor's revenge on Fortunato, who had insulted him many times. The story deals with themes of revenge, friendship, appearance and reality, sin, etc.
In the given excerpt from the story, Montresor describes Fortunato's dress when he first met him that carnival night. He revealed that <em>"[Fortunato] wore motley . . . had on a tight-fitting parti-striped dress, and his head was surmounted by the conical cap and bells."</em> "Motley" refers to the multicolored suit worn by clowns, which seems to <u>foreshadow the character of Fortunato as a buffoon or a fool.</u>
Thus, the correct answer is the first option.
the first paragraph is talking about people should use public transport more to reduce the production of pollution to help decrease high amount of pollution, in towns and cities, carbon dioxide production can affect weather, and the environments it also decreases traffic and helps people
the second paragraph talks about how public transport isn't it a valid option for people who travel out of cities to in small towns, they speak how they need energy efficient cars to reduce the production of pollution and gas
Plato Answer:
Both poems raise questions. "Fire and Ice" questions the destructive nature of human emotions and their capacity for destruction. "Design" questions the existence of fate or “intelligent design." However, the poems are very different in their style and structure. "Fire and Ice" is a single-stanza poem with nine lines and an uneven meter. "Design," on the other hand, follows a Petrarchan sonnet's structure and is primarily written in iambic pentameter. Because the topics and the styles in both poems are so different, it’s hard to tell if they were written by the same poet.
She <span>had been working</span> on the project for 2 days before she finished it. So B is the only right one as it's a continuous action before an action with an exact defining past perfect continuous. Also there's a key word "for" that can help us to find out the tense.
But, in an even bigger sense, we cannot dedicate this ground. The men we honor, living and dead, who have struggled, have consecrated it, far above low power to add or detract.