Answer:
b
Explanation:
This excerpt doesn't give much detail but I'm pretty sure this is Polyphemus speaking. He is a cyclops, and son of Poseidon. When Odysseus and his men were trapped in a cave with the giant man-eating cyclops, they plotted to blind him and escape. So Odysseus got Polyphemus drunk on some kind of wine and waited for him to pass out. Then they got a huge stick or branch, sharpened the end and plunged it into the giant's eye. One can easily surmise that Polyphemus would seek revenge for this, so answer B is definite. Answer A might be an additional factor, as Polyphemus does refer to him in this passage as "raider of cities"--indicating perhaps some disapproval--but the damage to his (only!) eye would be the most important issue, since that is personal.
First of all you should give more points for someone to write a paragraph or 2 for you but… I will not type it for you but first Read the original theme because I don’t know the theme.. but I did something like this last year. Basically for example a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. You’d put it in a order. First you must open up the fridge, then take out the peanut butter and jelly, then get your bread, open the bread and take out 2 slices, open the peanut butter and jelly, open a drawer and get a knife or two, take the knife and scoop peanut butter on it and spread it on a piece of bread, then wipe your knife or use the other knife and scoop jelly on it and spread it on the bread, then put both pieces of bread together and enjoy eating it.
Answer:
What the speaker means in these lines is that reading goes beyond knowing how to read
.
Explanation:
In the Poem <em>Blind </em>by Fatima Naoot, what the author means in these lines is that the important thing in a reading is not the fact of knowing how to read, but of knowing how to interpret.
And that it doesn't matter if she is blind, she has to see beyond the retina to be able to get out of "earthlylife", that is, to go beyond.
Even in a few lines later the author says <em>"Reading does not require eyes"</em> and refers precisely to those previous lines, <u>because to read correctly you have to know how to make an interpretation, not just pronounce the words that are written in a text.
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