Answer:
5. climatic
Explanation:
Arranging things in a sequence, where each things precedes or succedes another is called ordering. Ordering can be done in several ways, depending on ordering criteria.
For example, we can arrange events chronologically, which means we arrange them based on the time period when they occured; from the most to the least recent event, or vice versa.
Spatial arrangement means that we list things based on their position in space; from right to left, or from top to bottom.
Logical order is when we place things in a manner that each one logically follows the previous.
However, in this example, we have climatic order, which means that things are arranged in an order from the least important to the most important, making the final thing on the list the most important, or strongest, or the best.
The poem speaks of a giant statue of a great and well-renowned king, but that statue lies destroyed in the sand. It speaks of the king being so famous that even "the mighty" cannot compare with it. And yet, in an ironic twist, this statue is described as a wreck. This implies that death overpowers even great fame and wealth, and the best choice is A.
Answer:
Because Tom wants Nick to meet his mistress, Myrtle Wilson.
Explanation:
They go to a car repair shop owned by Myrtle's husband, George Wilson. He chats with George and then secretly tells Myrtle to meet him in their apartment in New York, where they usually have their rendezvous.
<u>The Greek stories show that love was mostly around passion and not of the caring love</u>. Zeus, for example, the king of the gods made stupid things to sleep with girls; once he turned into a white bull just to carry away a woman. He even turned into rain just to enter a woman's room.
In Perseus story, that happens when the king of the island Perseus and his mother, Danae, lives wants to marry her. However, he is a cruel man and Danae refuses to marry him. The king, then, sends Perseus away from his home to face the Medusa.
In Perseus story and in Zeus example, it is clear how Greeks tend to see love: only beauty matters, and the lover can try everything to reach the loved one. Even then, the Greeks show how tragic can be a blind passion, the lover who doesn't truly care about the loved one tend to perish. In Perseus story, the hero brings back the Medusa head and saves his mother from the king, who was mad when Perseus came back from his adventure and tried to kill Danae. Of course, the passions Zeus persecuted just ended badly for the women, since he was the king of the gods.
There are other examples of caring love, personified in Homero Odyssey, for example. Odisseu took 20 years to come back home, and his wife, Penelope, waited all those years for him.
Imagery: <span>The brightness of her cheek would shame those stars / As daylight doth a lamp.
allusion: </span><span>Else would I tear the cave where Echo lies, / And make her airy tongue more hoarse than mine... </span>personification: <span>That fair for which love groan’d for and would die, / With tender Juliet match’d, is now not fair. </span>foreshadowing: Therefore love moderately; long love doth so; / Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow.