Answer:
Norma's personal desires resulted to her pushing the button, which unknowingly, led to her husband's death.
Explanation:
"Button, Button" is a shorty story written by Richard Matheson. It focuses on the story of a couple, Norma and Arthur, who were having financial troubles. Then, came a day when a mysterious box showed up. A stranger visited the house when Arthur was at work. He gave Norma the key to the box and told her that she could press the box to receive $50,000. However, if she does this, someone she didn't know will die.
Norma didn't listen to her husband when her husband threw the box in the trash. She was focused on <u>obtaining the</u><u> $50,000</u>, without thinking about who will die if she presses the button. Although her husband already told her that an innocent person might die once she does it, she still didn't care.
So, when Norma pressed the button, <em><u>her husband died in a train incident</u></em>. Norma wondered why her husband died and asked the stranger about it. The stranger only answered, <em>"Do you really think you knew your husband?</em>"
Answer:
The word that is an example of Schlosser's use of transitions in Fast Food Nation is "however".
Explanation:
The word "however" can be used as a transition word like many others when this is collocated between two simple sentences to create a compound one, generating precisely the effect of transition. In this sentence from "Fast Food Nation", "however" connects "Salmonella has been almost entirely eliminated from Swedish and Dutch eggs" and "...more than half a million people become ill after eating eggs...", here however is used as a transition word that also expresses contrast.
The tendency to watch one's environment and others in it for cues as to how to act in particular situations is called self - monitoring.
Victor Frankenstein could most closely be described as tormented.
Religious Freedom is the answer