Answer:
D
Explanation:
For TV shows to be most watched, it puts them out there showing people what the show is about and making others want to watch it as they'd wonder why everyone else likes it. It keeps them in business as well because of the viewers they get from watching it means they get money.
Answer:
D. after sentence 5
Explanation:
Let us first examine the meaning of this misplaced sentence.
It provides us with information regarding Shamsul Maidin's awards and prizes. However it uses the word "also" which implies that his awards have already been introduced and that this only follows from that.
Since his awards and recognitions are first introduced in sentences (4) and (5), this means that this misplaced sentence should logically come after them.
Answer:
A & B
Explanation:
Both make sense as in Heracles mythos he is a Greek superhuman
Katniss considers dying for her community while Peeta wants to die by himself.
Explanation:
Peeta is an individualistic person while Katniss is the one who wants to represent her own society.
Thus, for her a death of dignity is one in which she dies by the side of the morals she has set for her and her people.
For Peeta it is less simple than that .
For him it is about the individuality of the person and he wants to stay true to himself first and foremost before anything else.
He is putting his own sense of morality above the rest.
If he compromises himself as in his ideas then he would have failed.
Answer and explanation:
Note: I'm writing according to my responses while I read the story. Feel free to change anything to make it true for yourself.
Unlike readers at the time when the story was published, I've found it amusing and intelligent. At first, I assumed Mrs. Mallard would be another simple, shallow, tragic character. Her reaction after hearing of her husband's presumed death seemed quite normal, since she looked devastated. For an instant I thought she would die from her heart condition even though her sister and friend were careful while giving her the news. However, to my delight and surprise, Mrs. Mallard finds enlightenment at that sad moment. Her house and her husband have meant confinement for her. She has been obedient, submissive, impotent her whole life. As she locked her bedroom door, I thought she wouldn't know what to do without Mr. Mallard. But she looked out the window, saw the beautiful world that did not stop existing due to her husband's death, and realized she was finally free. The story suddenly got a thousand times more interesting. This woman, this seemingly shallow character, is actually deep and colorful. She has a will to live that had been buried. Now that the main symbol of her oppression as a woman is gone, she is at liberty to feel, think, and do as she pleases. It was comically tragic when she indeed died of her heart condition upon finding out her husband was alive. I hoped the story would end with Mrs. Mallard leaving the house and heading towards her new life. Still, the irony of the situation is amusing. Other characters assumed she died of happiness when we, the readers, know she died of disappointment.