Answer:
Alice is trying to grow up too quickly.
Explanation:
<em>Through the Looking-Glass </em>is a novel written by Lewis Carroll as the sequel to <em>Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.</em>
In the given scene, the Red Queen reveals to Alice that the entire countryside is laid out in squares, like a huge chessboard, and offers to make Alice a queen if she can move all the way to the eighth rank/row in a chess match.
The symbolic meaning that can be drawn from the given excerpt is that Alice is trying to grow up too quickly. It seems like she wants to become a queen before it's time, before she has passed the proper examination.
Answer: D. from hopeless to thankful
Explanation:
The mood of the first quatrain to the final couplet of this poem is going from hopeless to thankful. At first, William Shakespeare is telling the readers about love and marriage that seemed hopeless to him because he is considering love both beautiful, mysterious, and more but those mixed up feelings made his thoughts inspirational for his work. Because of that, he is thankful.
William Shakespeare on love: “Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind, and therefore is wing'd cupid painted blind.”
I think Zaroff serves as an antagonist.
I'm not sure about the next one.
I think they use onomatopoeia.
I'm not sure about the last one either.
Answer:
Image result for Think of a BIOME that you find interesting, write it here:
There are five major types of biomes: aquatic, grassland, forest, desert, and tundra, though some of these biomes can be further divided into more specific categories, such as freshwater, marine, savanna, tropical rainforest, temperate rainforest, and taiga. Aquatic biomes include both freshwater and marine biomes.
Explanation:
Answer:
When a Visiting Researcher or Library Guest with a HOLLIS account requests an in-library use item with policy 01 or 02, the only pick-up location is the owning library's Reading Room. When materials arrive at a library's Circulation Desk, Alma will show the item must go to the Reading Room. The Alma operator must set, or temporarily change, the current location in Alma to that library's Reading Room to notify the patron the item is on hold and ready at the Reading Room. Items for Visiting Researchers or Library Guests start with a 10-day hold once the patron is notified of its arrival on the Reading Room hold shelf. Once the patron "checks out" the item for the first time (see below for more information on loaning and returning at the Reading Room desk), the hold is removed and the 28 reading room "loan" period begins. Each subsequent time the patron wishes to use the item, staff remove the item from the shelf and "check it out" at the Reading Room desk Alma location. When the patron is done with the material, the item is "returned" at the Reading Room desk until the end of the 28-day "loan" period or until the patron no longer needs the item.
Note: Local Library policy would dictate whether to cancel requests for certain in-library use materials, or to manually shorten or lengthen the time on hold/Reading Room loan period.
Explanation: