The correct answer is A. The magician.
Explanation
An antagonist is a name given to a character who acts contrary to the main character. In some stories, the antagonists are villains who usually causes problems, and later the main character solves it epically. According to the extract, the antagonist of "Aladdin and the magic lamp" is the magician, because the author mentions that when he found Aladdin the main character was in a beautiful place, living a good life of wealth with the princess and had achieved all of this through the magician of the magic lamp, the magician, though that the best option was make Aladdin a poor and unhappy young like he was in the past all of this by stealing his lamp. So, the correct answer is A. The magician
I think that it is c because it seems the only one to be right and if you look at the picture it is obviously right. Hope this helps.
Answer:
The correct answer is The man who sat beside me at lunch, speaks French.
Explanation:
Relative clauses are sentences with<u> relative pronouns</u> (who, which, whose, that) used to define and identify a thing or person that <u>has already been mentioned before and we want to add more information.
</u>
To understand <u>whether it is necessary to add a comma or not</u>, you must ask yourself if the information you are adding is <u>extra or necessary</u>.
In this case, <em>"The man who sat beside me at lunch, speaks French."</em> The fact that he speaks French <u>is not relevant</u> with respect to the person to whom "<em>who</em>" is referring.
A necessary information would be <em>“sat beside me at lunch”</em>, since without that information it could be talking about any man.
a little bit of confused:
honestly i have no idea if what you posted was a question or somethi g to help someone with bad time-management (me) get better at that. either way it looks like all of that stuff is in order and if you were planning to help someone then thank you because i really needed that :)
Answer:
The Pilgrims (Plymouth Colony)
Writing in "The Pilgrims," his personal journals, Bradford William used the third person point of view to veil the narrator-participant as an ordinary observer. This literary device makes the reader to identify with the characters, thus enhancing the story's believability and objectivity. This contrasts with writing from the first or second person's points of view, which shows the narrator's active involvement, thereby increasing subjectivity while obscuring objectivity in story narration.
By writing from this third person point of view, using third person pronouns, William Bradford, separated himself from the plot of the story. Thus, he remained an observer-narrator and not an active participant. At the same time, since it is widely known that Bradford was the founder of the Plymouth Colony, Bradford shows his bias by isolating himself totally from the story, by writing with the third person pronouns.
Explanation:
According to history, William Bradford (1590-1657) was one of the founding fathers of the Plymouth Colony and its governor for 30 years. Single-handedly, Bradford drafted the legal code for the Plymouth Colony which facilitated the building of a Puritan-based community in the state of Massachusetts, one of the 6 New England states.