Answer:
The children promised <em><u>to </u></em><em><u>be</u></em> back by mine.
10. a prayer that her love will live eternally
Saying that she hopes God allows that her love will live on after death shows that she wants a love that lives forever
11. c. "Landscape plotted and pieced--fold, fallow and plough"
This shows what he has done to his land to make it his own and how hard he has worked on it
12. d. "The land's sharp features seemed to be/the Century's corpse outleant"
This shows that the land basically resembles a corpse which shows how powerful an effect nature can have on shaping land.
Yes, it is true that in story-telling, the conflict generally produces a struggle leading to a sequence of events resulting in suspense or excitement, although this conflict can take different "shapes" and develop as the characters try to solve it.
<u>The correct answer is: It demonstrates that Nora is considering leaving her children.</u> Nora reveals to the nurse that she fears that her children will forget her if she leaves definitively. Nora believes that her secret will be revealed and she will be expelled from her home, her family and society. Nora did not have to worry about taking care of the children because she had the help of the nurse and more servants.
The right answer is:
They contribute to the rising action by introducing a secondary conflict related to Mrs. Pontellier’s envy of the ease with which Madame Ratignolle manages traditional female roles.
Explanation:
these two scenes from chapter 5 contribute to the novel’s plot development as the rising action. They can not be part of the climax because we are not talking about the main characters in the book.