Answer:
all things don't have a happy ending and not all things need one. This is a short stories of a little girl named (insert) who couldn't stop daydreaming. this doesn't seem like a big problem but she couldn't stop she would pace in her room where a portal to a new would open up and would close for hours at a time a class project lays on her desk that due the next day but she haven't stared her part. but all she could think of was her riding her magical dog in the sky trying to run away from the evil army of hairball spitting cats. they have her corned then she hears her named being yelled angerly it's her dad. her heart skips a beat or two as she slowly creeps out of her room sh feels her head spinning in the wall closing in on her she walk down the stairs but her obviously drunk dad have gotten to her mother instead her mom sees her in shakes her head with a scared expression. guilt starts to rush in her body as she turn around and go back to her room. then she hear yelling banging and crying before she drowns herself back into daydream that project never gets done she fails it and her group-mates get a lower grade but thats better then having to live and the nightmare we call reality.
i hope this is what you meant and that i didn't take to long you might have to shorten it some and revise it because i suck at writting btw this is based off a condition called maladaptive daydreaming so go check that out
I agree with the person above - the correct answer is Joseph Campbell.
He was a famous American mythologist and writer who wrote a lot about mythology and about the universal hero storyline. He gave that a term, which is monomyth, meaning that this particular myth appears all over the world.
<u>Answer:</u>
"You don't get it, sister. I cannot drive a Chinese model. If I did, people would think I am cheap and laugh at me."
<u>Explanation:</u>
In the short story, "The Bane of the Internet" by Ha Jin, this statement is written by Yuchin in an e-mail to her sister (who is also the narrator), demanding her to lend Yuchin a sum of $10,000 so that she could buy a foreign car, even if it was doubly rated (as the narrator mentions), because she didn't want to appear "cheap" by getting a Chinese car which was priced less. This sentence shows her excessive concern with her image and status, and hence clearly illustrates her vanity. Her sister realises that Yuchin had also caught the auto mania.
The other options are incorrect because:
- The first one shows her need to be above or impress her ex-husband, which was not the real reason she was buying an expensive car, as the narrator later realises.
- The second one shows her envy towards her niece for owning a car.
- The last one illustrates her adamant and headstrong nature, bordering to manipulation, but not vanity.
the answer is none of above took me a good time to find this question out
<span>It might be said that the implicitly stated opinion on the nation's state of affairs might be option A "I have said this many times...." because It reveals a personal opinion on the matter. This might be seen as the narrator´s thought and speculation about A Philip Randolph ´s role in society. The narrator suggests that Randolph could have been more than a syndicalist, maybe to have even more influence and power within society. <span>
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