Answer:
The word which describes the motivation behind Hiawatha's sacrifice is:
C. commiseration.
Explanation:
Commiseration means sympathy or compassion for the suffering of others. In the myth "Hiawatha: the Unifier," commiseration is the motivation behind Hiawatha's actions. It is due to his sympathy for human beings that he comes to earth from Heavens. He rescues people from monsters and teaches them different skills so that they are able to survive on their own. Later, it is also due to his compassion that he makes a huge sacrifice when the tribes he once taught and named are being attacked by a wild, ferocious people.
Answer:
The main thing to remember about topic is that it pertains to the story's “what.” It's driven by facts and specifics, whereas theme deals with the big picture and overall meaning that reveal why the story matters.
Explanation:
Answer:
C. The reader understands the characters' motivation.
Explanation:
Think about most works of fiction or other genre of literature and this theme seems to hold true that conclusion provide a way to understand why characters acted the way they did, it provides a way to complete the process of developing the character's true motivation (in a way that reader understands it)
These phrases convey the meaning.
E. "the hurt was past the power of medicine
F. "its flowers to the earth"
Explanation:
The two passages conveys the meaning of the phrase that is 'flitting life' which in these terms would mean a life that is going away from the hand swiftly and cannot be stopped from moving away thus swiftly.
The life that is being described here moves such as the person being described is dying a painful death that the god cannot do much about.
That Apollo must only see from the sidelines as the hero dies is one of the harsher truths of the life of person and how it can go.
Answer:
The first one is a simple sentence, the second one is a compound-complex
Explanation:
the second one contains both a dependent, and independent clause, and is joined by a comma, the first one has a subject, and verb.