Since Katara lost her mother’s necklace in a previous episode, Aang made her a new one from Sokka’s fishing lines.
Answer:
Explanation:
When the narrator points out that Miriam would read Sobel's literary commentaries "page by sanctified page, as if the word of God were inscribed on them," the implication is certainly that Miriam is perhaps in love with Sobel. We might also infer at this point that perhaps Sobel writes at such length for the benefit of Miriam, and that he, therefore, is also in love with her.
Answer:
The paragraph contains a personification of luck/chance. Federigo refers to his luck as Fortune and conveys that despite his repeated complaining, Fortune is always scheming against him.
“My lady, ever since it pleased God for me to place my love in you, I have felt that Fortune has been hostile to me in many things, and I have complained of her, but all this is nothing compared to what she has just done to me, and I must never be at peace with her again, thinking about how you have come here to my poor home where, while it was rich, you never deigned to come, and you requested a small gift, and Fortune worked to make it impossible for me to give it to you; and why this is so I shall tell you briefly. "
Explanation:
The question is from Federigo's Falcon by Giovanni Boccaccio. In the paragraph 18, Federigo personifies luck in the form of Fortune, someone who keeps preventing his happiness and with whom he has an antagonistic relationship.
His agony could be a metaphor for something deeper, or he could have a different life than the one that you have already made up for him in your own mind. He could be in actual physical pain, or it could just be his mind.
Evan Bonner’s pen pal lives in Ankara, Turkey .
Put the comma after Ankara, hope it helps :3