<span>1) B. Greeting yourself is a paradoxical image. One greets others.
2) C. In "Love on Love" the writer uses paradox to support the theme of healing the wounds from a broken heart. After all, you are alone in this poem. The author is asking you to, paradoxically again, "give back your heart". This, like the earlier greeting, means you will be giving your heart back to yourself; presumably because you gave it to someone else before.</span>
Answer: C. Perfect in motivations and actions.
Explanation: In ancient Greece, Aristotle was the one who defined tragedy like ""the imitation of an action that is serious and also as having magnitude, complete in itself." he also wrote a meticulous and strict description of how the tragic hero or heroine must be, and how must they act. The characteristic that isn't typical of a tragic hero or heroine is that is perfect in motivations and actions, in the contrary the heroes always had flaws that made them realistic to the audience.
Both life choices <u>were actually very similar.</u>
Explanation:
As both the roads are worn out really about the same it suggests that almost same number of people have chosen both the roads, hence<u> there seems to be no essential difference between the two as both are taken by similar number of people.</u>
In terms of the metaphorical meaning the choices seem to be very similar and yet it seems difficult to choose between them because of man's inability to choose between two paths and then not wondering what the other had in store.