Answer:
The answer is C
If it edge nuity exams... I have done them all and could do them for you at a small price :)
Answer:
So, exactly whats the question? All i see is paragraphs, i need the main question.
Explanation:
In "Auspex," the phrase “dead leaves and snow” at the end of the first stanza implies that the speaker is experiencing an absence of love or passion.
The author compares his heart to a nest that once had birds in it. In this nest, when the last bird leaves, it remains only with "dead leaves and snow", and not with life and warmth that those birds (or feelings) had.
The correct answers are:
1-Olivia: Stubborn
Even though Olivia is a young and beautiful woman being courted by two good suitors, she insists that she will mourn her late brother for seven years before accepting any marriage porposal.
2-Orsino: Lovesick
Orsino is a nobleman who is madly in love with Lady Olivia. However, the feeling is not mutual, causing Orsino to suffer greatly.
3-Viola: Resourceful
Viola shows resourcefulness after surviving her ship wreck, when she decides to disguise herself as a man to make a new and better life for herself in Illyria.
4-Malvolio: Self-absorbed
Malvolio is the head servant of Olivia's household. When Sir Toby, Sir Andrew, and Maria made him believe Lady Olivia was in love with him, he is only interested because he believes that, by marrying her, he would become part of the higher class.
St. Veronica. St. Veronica, (flourished 1st century ce, Jerusalem; feast day July 12), renowned legendary woman who, moved by the sight of Christ carrying his cross to Golgotha, gave him her kerchief to wipe his brow, after which he handed it back imprinted with the image of his face.
St. Veronica was canonized on July 12, 1885. St. Veronica was born in the 1st Century AD in either Caesarea Philippi or Jerusalem. She was known for The Veil of Veronica which she wiped Jesus's face with on the way of the cross. St. Veronica died during the 1st Century AD and she was canonized on July 12, 1885.
They were born in Caesarea Philippi