Answer:
Anne changed in many ways over the two years she was writing her diary. Some of these changes can be described as “growth.” She became an astute observer of politics, and of human nature, and she became a very practiced and well-educated writer.
Explanation:
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B. Love
In the play, all of the main characters are twisted in plots that all go around the central theme of love in Twelfth Night.
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A sentence describing how teachers can use technology to provide students with immediate feedback. This detail should the student include to support this claim.
Technology is the result of accumulated knowledge and the application of skills, methods and processes used in industrial production and scientific research.
Technology is built into the operation of all machines, with or without detailed knowledge of their function, for the organization's intended purpose. A company's technologies consist of what are known as systems. Systems work by taking input, changing that input through what is known as a process, and then producing an output that achieves the intended purpose of the system.
Hence, the correct answer is Option A
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It was a dark and shadowy night, nothing could be seen for miles ahead. Everything was plain; there were no trees and no houses nearby. The place was entirely deserted. Where had this wandering fellow gone to so late at night? Even he did not know the answer. Perhaps, everything was a sort of limbo, he had died and gone to nowhere.
However, something was off. This place of nowhere had an elegance to it. It was a place of night and a place where shadows roamed in peace. It was majestic, it was a place where ghost haunted and the dead were were at peace with themselves. Buried underneath the ground were bones, he knew that due to the fact that a voice in his head had told him and he was warned not to disturb their peace. This place where he was at had no tombsstones to remember the dead. There were no plants, not weeds growing from the ground, not even tumbleweeds passing by. This place was absolutely void. Where was he? He did not know. But, one thing was certain and that was that he lived.
“Where am I?” He would ask himself. He would pace around the endless acres of nothingness that was filled with shadows and ghosts until he saw a green light. He tried to run after the green light but the more he ran the farther it seemed. Until, he just gave up. Then, he looked around and it seemed to him that he was still in the same place as before, nothing has changed. When he got tired of standing he sat down and cried. “Where am I?” he cried. Yet, there was no one to console him. There was no God nor man or woman, or even animal to be by his side. He was all alone in a secluded place that seemed to have no end. He thought that maybe perhaps it was a haunted place that whoever enters can never go back to their original life. This thought made him feel the temptation to dig a grave for himself, and he did, with his bare hands. When he finished he laid in it and waited and once he found his flesh no longer chubby but instead sucked to the bone he took the pile of dirt that he withdrew from the ground to dig the grave and he… still in the grave began shoving the dirt within the hole he made and he submerged himself within the dirt and due to suffocation, he died.
Hello. This question is based on the text "Grendel" by John Gardner.
Answer:
O B. Grendel is a giant that wishes to have the same benevolent qualities as Hrothgar.
Explanation:
Grendel is an adaptation of an epic poem "Beowulf", where the story is retold from the point of view of Grendel, the great villain of the poem. Grendel wants to find meaning in his life and in the world around him in relation to the concepts defended by civilization, in a philosophical way and placing the character as an anti-hero and not as a hero.
In the text, Grendel is a giant who wants to have the same benevolent qualities as Hrothgar, however he takes questionable steps to achieve his goal. This puts him in the position of anti-hero and allows the author to recognize himself in a more human character.