The answer is a chronological order. It is a technique of
speech organization in which the key points follow a time pattern. A best
example of chronological is a profile that starts in 1920 and
goes over 1997. In this way, I will
start telling they form near the equator over the warm ocean waters.
Answer:
The correct choice is A) Miyax still wants to live a very different life, far from Alaska.
Explanation:
In the story <em>Julie of the Wolves, </em>Miyax who is the same person as Julie is potrayed as a young fatherless Eskimo who decided that her current life no longer appealed to her.
In paragraph 24 Amy her Pen Pal from San Francisco is introduced. In her letters, Amy would always urge Julie to come to San Francisco.
Somewhere at the tail end of the Part I about 4 paragraphs to the end of part I) Miyax receives a letter in which Amy, her pen pal, entertains her to the possibility that when she arrives San Francisco, they'd both visit the Theatre.
By the following day, Miyax was ready to leave with the wolves to San Francisco. She wanted to be far away from Alaska to see with her eyes the beauty San Francisco as it has been portrayed by Amy.
Cheers!
Answer choice B is the answer
<span>s a child, Dede is always smiling, trying to please. She is intelligent, inevitability and from a young age her father depends on her to "help with the books". Dede volunteers to stay behind with her parents so her sisters can go to boarding school (Chapter 1). Though she is attracted to the rebel Lio, Dede is silent about her desires and loses him to her sister Minerva. In a furtive attempt to assert herself, Dede burns Lio's letter asking Minerva to flee the country with him, but she cannot allow herself to the inevitability of the life expected of her. She marries her domineering childhood sweetheart Jaimito, and finds herself "already beginning to compromise with the man" even before they are wed. Dede knows that "if she...(thinks) long and hard about what (is) right and wrong", she would join her sisters in revolution, but she does not because her husband forbids it (Chapter 5).Dede finds her voice only after her sisters' deaths. In the immediate aftermath she screams her defiance to the SIM, then takes charge of the girls' funeral arrangements and raises their children. After several years she leaves Jaimito and establishes herself in the business world. Dede retains much of her old self in her new life, however. She continues to achieve, winning prizes yearly for "the most sales of anyone in her company", and sacrifices her privacy to keep the memory of her sisters alive (Epilogue).</span>