I personally have never read "rules of the game" but I would like to answer because I believe every question needs an answer so the tell-tale-heart is a story of an old man who was annoyed by the eyes of a visitor at his motel so one day he got tired of it and killed him
I know this may not help but I hope it does and at the very least I'm glad you at least got an answer
In both stories, the narrator is the central character.
In both stories, the narrator looks back on past events with a new perspective.
<em>Differences
</em>
The central character in “The Tell-Tale Heart” is an unknown adult. The central character in “Rules of the Game” is a little girl.
The narrator in “The Tell-Tale Heart” is insane. The narrator in “Rules of the Game” is a young girl trying to fit in among people from a different culture.
Explanation:
This is the Plato answer so use these to make the paragraph.
Based on the given passage above, the answer would be the last option. <span>In this passage from President Kennedy's 1963 Civil Rights Address, the phrase "heart of the question" most likely means "center of the nation". Hope this answers your question.</span>
The sentence that contains an incorrect possessive form is c) Ours' is surely the most colorful float in the parade. The correct version would be - Ours is ... You don't have to use the apostrophe here.