The above question wants a personal answer. In that case, I can't answer it, but I'll show you how to do it.
<h3>Steps to get to the answer</h3>
- Read all the book titles and their authors.
- Identify the books that you were able to recognize the story or their authors.
- Do a little research on books you don't know, to make sure you don't know about them.
You should show the books you know and talk briefly about them, showing what story points you know and how these stories are significant to the time they were written and to literature.
Learn more about literature:
brainly.com/question/1485606
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Answer:
A and C
Explanation:
A. If I were the president, I would create more jobs.
C: If Diane had been a cat, she would have climbed the tallest trees.
As evidence that Fawcett was "a remarkable man," the author shows that he was a very admirable explorer and was part of one of the most important geographical groups in Britain.
This can be seen in the lines:
- "Fawcett [...] as an honored member of Britain's renowned royal geographic society."
- "[...] He'd battle anacondas and electric eels, and how he'd emerge with maps of regions that no one had even came back from."
In this case, we can see that the author used the account of someone who studied Fawcett's life about his great deeds and how he was very good at what he did.
Fawcett was such an extraordinary man that even his disappearance is a curious thing and one that attracts the attention of all who want to know more about him.
In this case, we can say that the author's argument about Fawcett being an incredible man is effective because the author shows evidence to support it.
More information on the use of evidence at the link:
brainly.com/question/37503
The symbol of Hester's sin, recognizes in her mother's lack of response to her questions that Dimmesdale will not be like her mother; he will not, as Hawthorne urges in the final chapter and as Hester is, "be true" and acknowledge Hester and their child in public.