Answer:
- Carew’s murder provides Mr. Utterson with a reason to search Mr. Hyde’s house and learn more about him.
- Mr. Utterson finds evidence on the victim that further ties Mr. Hyde to Dr. Jekyll.
- Inspector Newcomen and Mr. Utterson find items that suggest Mr. Hyde has committed other crimes.
Explanation:
This is from chapter 4 of <em>The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde</em>.
A maid has witnessed murder of Mr. Carew (beaten to death with a cane) and recognizes his murderer as Mr. Hyde which provides Mr. Utterson with a reason to search Mr. Hyde’s house and learn more about him. On a crime scene, they find a letter addressed to Mr. Utterson and half of the cane that was murder weapon that further ties Mr. Hyde to Dr. Jekyll. Since Mr. Utterson already knew Mr. Hyde`s address, he went there with police to try to find Mr. Hyde or some evidence. What they found was the other half of the cane and checkbook, both burned which suggest Mr. Hyde has committed other crimes.
1. The answer is sophisticated
2. The answer is confusing
3. The answer is past perfect tense?
I am unsure of the last one but that would be my guess
Answer: She never said, Call the police. Neither did she sound genuinely threatened. Her demands were just. LET ME IN LET ME IN. She covered the peep-hole. I peeped out my window. I didn’t see the male but I heard him talking in a low voice. However, I saw a glimpse of her on my porch. She had on all black. I DID NOT open the door. I called the police. And as quickly as the commotion began, when they realized I wasn’t going to open the door, they disappeared into the night and it was dead silence again.
Explanation:
The extra step of dissolving the nucleus is needed during DNA replication in a eukaryotic cell, whereas bacteria are prokaryotic and therefore don't have a nucleus so they don't need this extra step.