Answer:
a) The Rivers Styx, Archeron, Phlegethon that flow through the underworld
Explanation:
The Rivers Styx, Archeron and Phlegethon mentioned in this text are three of the five rivers that are believed by the Greek to separate the earth from the underworld.
They are not Roman cities as in option B
Option C is incorrect because they are not stars and are not associated with wealth, fame, and power. Rather, Phlegethon is a river of fire, Acheron, a river of peril, and Styx is a river that is void of love .
Option D is incorrect because Hercules never faced them.
Answer:
Critical thinking.
Explanation:
'Critical thinking' is described as the process of objectively examining and rationally evaluating a specific topic or issue with the primary aim to reach a deduction or conclusion.
In the given question, Janie is indulged in '<u>critical thinking</u>' as she rationally attempts to analyze and evaluate the information in order to logically deduce that whether the information presented in the formation was authentic and relevant. This would assist her in determining the reliability of the claim and look at the presentation through different perspectives and deduce a more reasonable and strengthened judgment.
Answer:
In the English countryside, a poor tinker named Christopher Sly becomes the target of a prank by a local lord. Finding Sly drunk out of his wits in front of an alehouse, the lord has his men take Sly to his manor, dress him in his finery, and treat him as a lord. When Sly recovers, the men tell him that he is a lord and that he only believes himself to be a tinker because he has been insane for the past several years. Waking in the lord’s bed, Sly at first refuses to accept the men’s story, but when he hears of his “wife,” a pageboy dressed in women’s clothing, he readily agrees that he is the lord they purport him to be. Sly wants to be left alone with his wife, but the servants tell him that a troupe of actors has arrived to present a play for him. The play that Sly watches makes up the main story of The Taming of the Shrew.
Explanation:
Answer: Paragraph 1
Explanation:
Paragraph 1 is the one who can best show us an example of imagery. Imagery is considering the figurative language and it is showing us visually descriptive work. The readers who are reading imagery are <u>can visually make appropriate pictures in their mind which is close to what the speaker was wanted to show to them</u>. It is used in literature to show up ideas or situation of the text.
- In paragraph one we have a description of a pit. The speaker is telling us that it is a dreadful pit which means it is a horrible and scary place. He says that the hell is open and the hell is also representing the pit in the text.