Answer:
you are correct!
Explanation:
your current answers are right!
Answer:
The third stanza jumps way forward in time. Aengus is now an old man, and he's spent his whole life looking for the "glimmering girl" who appeared to him that day when he was out fishing. Even though he's old, he's determined to find out where the girl has gone. He imagines that, when he finally finds her, he'll kiss her and hold her hands. He also says that he and she will walk among the grass, and together they'll pluck the "silver apples of the moon" and the "golden apples of the sun" until the end of time
Explanation:
Answer:
Dee hasn't changed the way she is.
Explanation:
Dee always despised her mother and sister. This contempt was mainly because she did not identify with the family and despises the way they lived. As the story unfolds the way Dee acts with the family remains the same, but she uses the pretext that the family does not embrace the African heritage they have, when in fact Dee does not embrace that heritage, but lives superficially to pass an image of glamor that cannot be compared to the lives of blacks.
I have a feeling that the answer to your question is letter C.
I hope I have answered it correctly for you.
Answer: Vǫluspá is the first and best known poem of the Poetic Edda. It tells the story of the creation of the world and its coming end, related to the audience by a völva addressing Odin. It is one of the most important primary sources for the study of Norse mythology.
Explanation: