<span>To mock the manner of speaking that the writer is criticizing is the reason why that line of poetry is stated as a question.</span>
Because Radley is much older than them, and Scout, Jim, and Dill find him interesting because of this.
Depending on the form, the English sonnet explores a topic until the final couplet in which the general issues is presented, while the Italian sonnet presents the problem until the end of the second quatrain, and then the overall it presents the solution, which is not found in English sonnets.
The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that: "He wants to win the contest and take the place of Ulysses." The statements that describe how Antinous is portrayed in this excerpt from Book 21 of the Odyssey is that <span>He wants to win the contest and take the place of Ulysses.</span>
Answer:
A.
Explanation:
The irony that Mary Shelley used in the passage when Felix teaches Safie English was the choice that he makes in choosing the book "Ruins of Empires" by Volney. The book speaks about the "slothful Asiatics" about the wars, etc.
While Felix teaches English to Safie, the monster also learns the language. and while learning language he also learns about the vices of humans to each other. Another irony we can find in the text was that the monster is by name monster but in nature, humans are monstrous because of the deeds that they do with each other.
The correct option is A.