Though Buck is not a husky himself, does he take on any of their qualities? Using Jack London’s descriptions from his essay “Husky: Wolf-Dog of the North,” complete this prompt analyzing the shared traits between Buck and his wild counterparts, and how Buck is influenced by his new setting and surroundings. What do these shared traits tell you about some of the larger themes and ideas in London’s body of work? Your prompt should draw on a number of different quotations and examples (evidence) from both “Husky” and The Call of the Wild<span> to support your analysis.
Please mark me as brainliest.</span>
Answer:
A character expects the opposite of what the reader knows will happen.
A character acts in a way the reader knows to be unsuitable or untimely to the actual circumstances.
A character makes a statement that the reader recognizes as sarcastic but which the other characters in the story may not.
Explanation:
Dramatic irony is defined as the "When the audience knows something the character does not"
In all of these situations, the character does not know what is happening but the audience does.
Answer:
blames,blamed,blaming!
Explanation:
I blamed the goverment for our problems.
Answer here you go
Explanation:
Product Description:
The bowling ball weighs 13 pounds...
The bowling lane is 60 feet long and 41.5...
Process Description:
The ball follows a curved path..
The ball gathers speed as it rolls down..
Answer:
Father makes the boys replace the Duvitch family's fish.
Explanation:
In the short story "The Strangers That Came to Town" by Ambrose Flack, the plot of the story revolves around the Duvitch family who were deemed strange and weird by the residents of Syringa Street. But one incident led to the change in everyone's perspective, making the family a new 'attraction' for the whole neighborhood.
The stereotypical treatment of the Duvitch family led everyone to not talk to or approach them, and they were kept all alone in their own world. So, when the fishing trip that the boys and their father took led to an unfortunate incident, Father made the boys fish until they had re-compensated whatever loss they had made Mr. Duvitch suffer. Father's act of making the boys replace the dead/ murdered fishes best supports the theme of stereotypical behavior.
Thus, the correct answer is the first option.