Answer:
Sequence of a stand-alone paragraph: Topic, evidence, conclusion
Consonance: Pattern of similar consonant sounds
Family is everything. They would do anything for you and you should do anything and everything you can to help, take care of and love them. Family reunions are a time of happiness and contended feeling because you do things for the ones you love. Andre didn’t even care that he had to sleep in the sleeping bag, he adjusted and even said that he wanted to sleep in the sleeping bag. They are all a well knitted family as the ,mother had even given them t shirts that were matching and no one complained. If it were normal kids, preteens, or teenagers they would have groaned and moved until they could were what they wanted. You should always spend time with your family, and if you don’t have time for them, make sure you make time for them.
Hope this helped! :)
Answer:
I am not sad, yet I am crying
Answer:
A reminder of what the characters face.
Explanation:
Jack London's novel "White Fang" revolves around the story of a wild wolfdog named White Fang. The story delves into the life of the wolf-dog, a mix breed offspring and his survival, and eventually ends up as a domestic pet in California.
The given passage is from Part 1 of the story where two men, Henry and Bill were passing through the snowy wilderness, in a sled pulled by their six dogs. The author includes a certain detail about one man who had died and was kept in a box on the sled, <em>"a man whom the Wild had conquered and beaten down until he would never move nor struggle again"</em>. The narrator continues, <em>"It is not the way of the Wild to like movement. Life is an offense to it, for life is movement; and the Wild aims always to destroy movement [...] man who is the most restless of life, ever in revolt against the dictum (law) that all movement must, in the end, come to the cessation of movement"</em>.
This statement seems suggestive of the obstacles or force of nature that the characters have faced. The Wild represents the conflict they are met with, and thus, make the dead man a representation of what the other two characters are to face in their journey.