No- an online persona isn't much of a persona to begin with.
Many people put a facade over their true identity when online (or on social media) for any number of reasons. They try to create a virtual life of upbeat social interactions, appearing happy and seeming to live a great life. A person's true personality needs to be revealed through real life experiences with others.
After someone dies, nobody thinks about their facebook followers, quirky posts/comments online, or how many blogs they wrote; their smile, unique personality, and what they accomplished will live on in people's minds.
Frequently, schedules, seldom?
Answer:
A Wrinkle in Time is the story of Meg Murry, a high-school-aged girl who is transported on an adventure through time and space with her younger brother Charles Wallace and her friend Calvin O'Keefe to rescue her father, a gifted scientist, from the evil forces that hold him prisoner on another planet.
Explanation:
Without knowing the excerpt i’d say it’s mosy likely B
<u>Answer:</u>
"You don't get it, sister. I cannot drive a Chinese model. If I did, people would think I am cheap and laugh at me."
<u>Explanation:</u>
In the short story, "The Bane of the Internet" by Ha Jin, this statement is written by Yuchin in an e-mail to her sister (who is also the narrator), demanding her to lend Yuchin a sum of $10,000 so that she could buy a foreign car, even if it was doubly rated (as the narrator mentions), because she didn't want to appear "cheap" by getting a Chinese car which was priced less. This sentence shows her excessive concern with her image and status, and hence clearly illustrates her vanity. Her sister realises that Yuchin had also caught the auto mania.
The other options are incorrect because:
- The first one shows her need to be above or impress her ex-husband, which was not the real reason she was buying an expensive car, as the narrator later realises.
- The second one shows her envy towards her niece for owning a car.
- The last one illustrates her adamant and headstrong nature, bordering to manipulation, but not vanity.