Answer:
The answer is hyperbole. It is very unlikely that there was absolutely no money, absolutely nothing to buy, and absolutely nowhere to go. A hyperbole is a gross exaggeration, meaning that what is being said has been expanded to prove a point.
Answer:
D A photograph of Gatsby with him parents
Answer:
Newton's and Einstein's ideas are like the word 'red in
English or Spanish
Explanation:
Because this is a minor detail, red and languages have nothing to do with black holes and science.
Answer:
Gwendolen portrays Victorian qualities of being superficial. Gwendolen's lines imply that her brother is flirtatious.
Explanation:
Oscar Wild’s one of the most famous play ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ is all about how wealth and status overweight love, and how too much importance is placed on materialistic things.
The excerpt provided is a conversation between Jack and Gwendolen. Here Gwendolen acts as superficial by being interested only in Gwendolen looks. On the other hand, whatever Gwendolen states about her brother Gerald, implies that he is flirtatious who go on flirting with every other girl. Gwendolen know this because his brother even flirts with her girl-friends.
This is what happens before the story begins in "The Cask of Amontillado", according to my imagination:
Fortunato had always been an arrogant man who loved to laugh at his friends' imperfections or mistakes in general. When Montresor first met him, he was amazed at how clever and generous that man seemed to be. However, such an impression quickly died out: Fortunato turned out to be a rude, unkind, bitter man. That was a huge disappointment for Montresor, who really treasured his friend, at least in the beginning of their friendship.
One day, the two friends were having a casual conversation, when suddenly Fortunato turned to Montresor and said to him: "I'm sure I'm better than you at anything; that's why you were so jealous whenever I came around that girl you fancied..." Montresor was shocked to hear that, to which he replied right away: "Jealous? What are you talking about?" Fortunato had a cynical smile on his face, and said next: "So you think I didn't notice how insecure you felt... Maybe you were afraid she would fall in love with me, not with you..." After hearing that, Montresor was oppressed with anger, and couldn't say a word since if he did so, he would probably burst out in tears of uncontrollable rage.
After having spent the following night in a state of agitated insomnia, Montresor had an idea: inviting Fortunato to go taste some wine in a place where no one would bother them and that would also be suitable for a sweet and irreversible revenge.