The order of events in Ivan Ilyich's life is: (1) Ivan Ilyich graduates from the School of Law and qualifies for the tenth rank of the civil service, (2) Ivan Ilyich is offered the post of examining magistrate in a Russian province, (3) Ivan Ilyich becomes assistant public prosecutor, a position that he serves in for seven years, (4) Ivan Ilyich becomes a public prosecutor and is transferred to another province, and (5) Ivan Ilyich meets Zachar Ivanovich in St. Petersburg and receives a guaranteed appointment in the Department of Justice.
<em>The Death of Ivan Ilyich </em>is a novel written by Leo Tolstoy in 1886.<u> The main character of the book is Ivan Ilyich, a high-court judge that is forced to deal with a terminal illness</u>. Other characters are Ivan Ilyich's wife, Praskovya Fëdorovna Golovin, who does not care about her husband's suffering, and Peter Ivanovich, Ivan's unconditional friend. <em>The Death of Ivan Ilyich </em>is considered one of the masterpieces of world literature.
Answer:
In the opening sentence of the story the author states that "you were always a gambler" and you, "took chances." This shows that the main character is willing and able to take any and all risks necessary in order to escape slavery. This sets the tone for the type of person that the main character strives to be. The text foreshadows more to describe the main character being on a wooden ship.
Explanation:
There is a slight error in the title of this question :)
Instead of ‘if my dad would let me’, it’s ‘had my dad let me (remember this useful phrase ending). This is because you can’t have a double ‘would’ in the same phrase.
Answer:
He had the blue-eyed children put on green construction paper armbands. And then she told the children that the brown-eyed students were smarter. Elliott came up with an explanation: Intelligence, she told the children, was determined by melanin.
Explanation:
The right answer here would be A - the phrase 'modulate your voice'
refers to a need to vary your voice's properties. Modulating means
changing the pitch or tone, and can be used referring to one's voice, or
to an instrument. You can modulate both up or down, and this usually
involves changing the key signature in which you are playing or singing.