Answer:
connecting the events in the novel Chains with the culture of 1700s America
Explanation:
Text-to-world means exactly what it sounds like. Compare a written text to a world event.
A is the correct answer because it involves a real-life source (1700s America) and a textual source <em>(Chains)</em>. None of the other sources have the "world" part.
- connecting the villain in The Final Problem with other antagonists in mystery novels = text-to-text
- connecting the book The American Revolution with an article about the Mexican Revolution = text-to-text
- connecting the theme of the novel Hatchet with the theme of the novel Island of the Blue Dolphins = text-to-text
D I think don’t trust me yet, it’s a maybe
Answer and Explanation:
Hamlet is, in fact, going crazy. This madness is the result of the environment in which he lives and the lack of proactivity with which he faces the situations to which he is subjected. Hamlet's initiative in pretending to be crazy is a good departure from the real madness he presents, we can see that, due to Hamlet's contradiction in acting after a lot of reflection, or acting in full impulse causing disastrous results and promoting evil to all around him, like the scene where he kills Ophelia’s father as a result of complete lack of rationality.
However, Hamlet's madness is gradual and we can see that he gets worse as the series begins. Not even Hamlet is sure of his sanity.
<u>Answer:</u>
“It took us an hour to paddle over to the other side of the lake and back” uses a transitional word that best indicates a shift from one timeframe to another.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Transitional word is a connector which connects two separate sentences into one. In the given example, the sentence exactly conveys a meaning that it took one hour to paddle from one side to other and vice versa. Mostly transition words are conjunctions that combines words, phrases or clauses. These transition words can be used within a single sentence. They can also used to combine two different sentences or even paragraphs.