Answer: D. It is fitting because Macbeth is the one who ordered the murderers to kill Banquo.
Explanation: I hope this helps
Answer:
D: Appropriate examples to use
Explanation:
Identifying your audience will help you determine what will be the best examples for the audience to relate too. As you would not want to use sesame street as an example for a group of CEO's and you would not want to use a spreadsheet of the past 5 days in the stock market for a group of kindergartners.
Answer:
A character vs self
The exposition
Explanation:
The options you were given are the following:
- A character vs self
- A character vs nature
- A character vs society
- The exposition
- The climax
- The falling action
- The resolution
<em>The Tell-Tale Heart</em> is a short story written by Edgar Allan Poe. It's told from the perspective of an unnamed narrator who is trying to convince the readers of his sanity while describing a murder he committed. He murdered an old man with a pale blue <em>vulture-eye. </em>After the murder, he begins hearing a thumping sound, which he interprets as the dead man's beating heart. The sound terrifies him and leads him to confess what he has done to officers.
The given passage is the beginning of the story, which means that it's the exposition. It introduces the characters and the conflict. In literature, there are two basic types of conflict:
- Internal conflict - a character struggles with their own opposing desires or beliefs.
- External conflict - a character struggles with an outside force, such as another character, nature, or society.
Here, we have an example of an inner (character vs self) conflict. The narrator tells us that the old man never wronged him and that he even loved him. However, he feels the need to murder him, as he explains it, because of his pale blue eye of a vulture, and decides to do that.
The correct answer is C, as Cousin is making excuses to avoid accompanying Everyman.
Everyman calls Kindred and Cousin and asks them to go with him on their journey to God, but both refuse to do so. Cousin explains a fundamental reason why nobody will join Everyman: people also have their own accounts to write, their own lives to develop.
While his reasons are true, in the story they work as an excuse of why he does not accompany Everyman.