That the people are stealing.
Answer:
She is seen as intimidating towards others without having to do anything.
Explanation:
As I read it, I read how she was able to be a "mortal danger", "Exquisite", "A trap set by nature", and "Her smile has known perfection" without even really having to try. She is able to be feminine while also holding a strong 'pose' as others might call it.
Hi this is only a start.
Beethoven
was born in December 1770, Bonn, Germany. Beethoven was a painter and a music
composer. I admire Beethoven because he did many things with his life, and is
now famous. He was a musician and an artist. His father was his first music
teacher.
Mary Cassatt
was born in May 22, 1844, Allegheny, Pittsburgh. Mary Cassatt was a painter,
she did many self-portraits of herself. She was a great painter. She was
inspired by Edgar Degas. Some people say that Mary was Edgar’s mistress. When
Mary moved to Paris in 1800, she lived there until she died
Answer:
C)metaphor
Explanation:
Metaphor - A figure of speech that describes a subject by asserting that it is, on some point of comparison, the same as another otherwise unrelated object.
Hyperbole - Exaggerating statements or claims that are not to be taken literally.
Personification - The attribution of a personal nature or human characteristics to something nonhuman, or the representation of an abstract quality in human form.
Alliteration - The occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words.
The correct answer is A. The boy's epiphany in "Araby" reveals the futility of human pursuits.
At the end of the story, the boy has several disappointments. His uncle is late, the bazaar is nearly closed by the time he gets there, and the only objects he finds are boring. All of his expectations have failed to live up to reality. The boy realizes that his relationship with Mangan's sister will end up the same -- better in his imagination than in reality.
In this way, the story says that life itself is disappointing and fails to live up to our imaginations. Answer A, that human pursuits are futile (or pointless), best encompasses the boy's epiphany.