Answer:
The name given to these primordial waters and the being who personified them was Nun.
Explanation:
In Egyptian creational myths, Nun or Nu is the oldest of the gods. He is the embodiment of the waters of chaos, the primeval waters. Nun is the father of Ra, the sun god, who rose from the primeval waters on a hillock and created himself and other gods. In Ancient Egypt, it was believed that Nun was the one who caused the annual flood of the Nile. It was also believed that the primeval waters never ceased to exist and that, each morning, as the Sun rose from the waters, the creation of the ordered cosmos was being reenacted.
The answer is slightly obvious. Obviously we know it’s not A. The Address does not talk about how citizens have the right to rebel, so it’s not B either. The Address is not taking a tone that reveals that war is pointless, and uses no negative terms to answer that claim. It’s not C either. Your answer is D, because the Address talks about how from those that have died, the remaining have increased devotion to their cause, and to resolve the conflict so that those who have died shall not die in vain.
D. An astronaut can't resist the temptation to push a mysterious red
button on her control panel.
I believe the correct answer is A. irony.
It is ironic that Rochester should reject Blanche because of Jane because their relationship is really the same - he wanted to get away from Blanche for the same reasons he wanted to start a relationship with Jane, which is quite ironic.