Answer:
.
.........
Explanation:
1. c
2. d
3. b
4. b
My sister is interested in a radio career.
Olga assured us that we were eating real german cooking.
"let's go To the beach" Kate said.
Ms. Jones teaches at Jefferson High School.
Sorry i can't understand last page :(
Answer:
Don't stop talking
Please mark as brainliest
Answer:
1. He decides to bestow it to his daughters
2. Goneril says that she loves him like she loves life and even more, Regan says that she loves him more than she loves Goneril.
3. Cordelia says that she loves him just as much as a daughter should love her father and that she loves him because he is her father.
4. He argues because he knows that Cordelia loves him and that she is Lear`s favorite child.
Explanation:
King Lear written by Shakespeare is a tragedy in which a king who considers himself old enough to pass the throne and all of his lands to his daughters (Regan, Goneril, Cordelia) who are first asked how much they love him. As Cordelia`s answer is not satisfying, he no longer considers her as his daughter. Regan and Goneril begin treating him disrespectfully which drives him mad and finally leads to conciliation with Cordelia, but as this is a tragedy, there is no happy ending.
One concept that, as a beginner in oil painting<span>, I haven´t grasped yet ... However, the </span>definition<span> of "</span>vibrant<span>" </span>color<span> is something that I still can´t "see" in a </span>color<span>. ... I think </span>most<span> people (including me) consider </span>vibrant color<span> to mean pure, bright ... it differently, but generally it's </span>used<span> to describe bright, intense </span>colour<span>.</span>
The following aspects of Wuthering Heights conform to the traits of a gothic novel:
the setting of the windswept moors, with a gloomy, dark atmosphere that pervades the manor Wuthering Heights
supernatural events, such as sightings of Catherine’s ghost by Lockwood and Heathcliff
violence depicted in Lockwood’s nightmare, in which the ghost-child’s hand is rubbed against the broken windowpane until it bleeds
a sense of mystery evoked by the gloomy, brooding landscape and Heathcliff’s strange behavior
The following elements do not fit into the gothic genre:
a realistic portrayal of the class differences in nineteenth-century England, as reflected in Hindley’s behavior toward Heathcliff
the rise of the moneyed middle class as a result of the Industrial Revolution, as portrayed by Heathcliff’s transformation to a wealthy gentleman
a somewhat happy ending, with the death of Heathcliff and the marriage of the younger Catherine and Hareton, who become the owners of Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange