Answer:
12. failed to submit a task on time
13. feels unpleasant
The state of knowing everything
(to further explain when it comes to third person narration there are three main types of narrators:
-objective: the narrator acts an observer, we don’t learn about any characters’ feelings or inner thoughts
-limited: the story is told from one of the characters’ perspective and we get to to know their thoughts and feelings
-omniscient: the narrator knows everything about all the characters, including all their thoughts and feelings)
hope this helps :)
The third quatrain extends beyond the descriptions of sight and smell with descriptions of sound.
Answer: Option C.
Explanation:
The first and second quatrain are about the description of physical appearances of the mistress. Shakespeare depicts how the lips, breasts, and hair of her mistress are. How she smells and so on. In the third quatrain, the poet moves from description of sight and smell to the description of sound where he introduces the readers to the voice of the mistress. He says that the mistress don’t have a musical voice. She speaks normally. The poet also illustrates how the mistress walks, which is also quite normal, she walks using her feet to get around.
The correct answer is the following.
<em>The two examples of how Jem Has grown in art 1 of "To Kill a Mockingbird" are:</em>
Jem starts considering other's people perspectives, not only the one she thinks. She tries to understand other's people circumstances. Such as the case of her relationship to Bo Radley. Jem also learns the value of courage, when Atticus defends his sons and shoots a rabid dog with a rifle.
"To Kill a Mockingbird" was written by Harper Lee in 1960. The novel refers to the life of children confronted by social issues such as prejudice and racism in the South of the United States. Lee won the Pulitzer price in 1961for the success of his novel.