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Alona [7]
3 years ago
15

Well, you waited a long time to tell me the truth, Mother.

English
2 answers:
Licemer1 [7]3 years ago
8 0
Conjunction that’s the answer i think
valkas [14]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

3 adverb

Explanation:

it modify the verb or describe a verb

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Which one of these statements could be a main idea
pychu [463]

Answer:

The main idea basically sums up what you read. If the most important part, the main conflict, and the climax are included or alluded to, then it is most likely the main idea.

Explanation:

Hope this helps:) Have a good day!

5 0
3 years ago
Which expectation do the king of the Wood-elves, the Master, and the people of Esgaroth have in common? Question 4 options: They
erma4kov [3.2K]

Answer:

Bilbo and the barrels float into the Long Lake and to the bay of Lake-town. Bilbo releases the bedraggled but grateful dwarves from the barrels. When Thorin announces the companys arrival, he creates a stir among the citizens of Esgaroth the lake-town. Some remember ancient prophecies and legends about dwarves return to the Lonely Mountain, but others do not and treat such talk as foolishness. The Master of the town, for example, does not believe any “king under the mountain” will ever appear. He is wary of welcoming Thorin and the company because he does not wish to create any more animosity with the Wood-elves than already exists. Still, popular sentiment runs in the dwarves favor, for many people in the town expect Thorins arrival to usher in a new age of prosperity. They treat the dwarves with great favor, even though the dwarves do not entirely embrace the high expectations some of the men hold of them. Thorin, however, “looked and walked as if his kingdom was already regained and Smaug chopped up into little bits.” The Master of the town, upset with the disruption the dwarves have caused and eventually suspicious that perhaps Thorin really is the rightful heir to the dwarf kings, is eager to see the dwarves depart for the Lonely Mountain, where they expect to reclaim what is rightfully theirs.

Analysis

This chapter suggests that more than mere circumstance may have been at work in the way in which Bilbo and his friends came to Lake-town. Because of the dispute over river traffic between Wood-elves and men, and because of the “earthquakes” that Smaug has been causing, “Bilbo had come in the end by the only road that was any good,” despite his and the dwarves having lost the path through Mirkwood. As he did when describing how Bilbo came to be in possession of the Ring (see Chapter 5), Tolkien hints that “fate” or “luck” plays just a much a part in the lives of his characters-and, perhaps, in everyones life-as do their own, self-willed actions. (Incidentally, Tolkien will develop this themes significance for Middle-earth further in The Lord of the Rings. Critic Tom Shippey, in J.R.R. Tolkien: Author of the Century [Houghton Mifflin, 2001], suggests that this theme reflects Tolkiens own Christian belief in providence, or the guiding foresight-pro + video; literally, “to see before”-of God.)

The narrator points out that men “remembered little” of the ancient history of the Lonely Mountain and Lake-town: the past wealth of the dwarves, the vast wars of ages gone by, the prophecies that the dwarf kings of old would return to inaugurate a new golden age. Such belief men now dismiss as a “pleasant legend.” If Thorin, in a sense, remembers “too much”-see the discussion of his possibly unhealthy pride in the Analysis of Chapter 1, a pride also seen in his over-confident swaggering in this chapter-then the men of Lake-town remember “too little.” They are unaware of their lands history, which, even though it may seem to be only the dwarves history, is really part of their own history as well. Note also that Tolkien here continues to develop the theme of conflict among the disparate peoples of Middle-earth by a reference to the Wood-elves and mens dispute over the upkeep of the river. As The Lord of the Rings will further demonstrate, people must recognize their common heritage and interdependence in order to ensure a positive future. The Hobbit is becoming, in this chapter, more and more a direct thematic introduction to Tolkiens larger work.

As a further example of this tendency, note the Master of the towns reaction to Thorin: his suspicion by chapters end that Thorin is really the prophesied King Under the Mountain anticipates Denethors refusal of Aragorns claim to the throne of Gondor in The Lord of the Rings. In Tolkiens Middle-earth-as in the real world-power seduces, and people do not easily relinquish it.

Explanation:

hope it helps!

5 0
2 years ago
Can u help me please?
Ad libitum [116K]
Sure i can help you whats your question?
3 0
4 years ago
Hi mga pare...Nagbabalik ako sa mundo charr​
Mumz [18]

Answer:

san ka galing pre? mars? xD

Explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
How does the excerpt from chapter 5 reveal the Time Traveller's initial theory of the social structure that exists in the future
kompoz [17]

The Time Traveller initially assumes that human society at the time he visited only consisted of the Eloi, who had reached the pinnacle of human comfort and security. They did not lack anything materially, and for that reason, they did not seem to need qualities like curiosity, strength, and vigor. However, after encountering the Morlocks, he discovers that this society actually consists of two races—one evolving from the aristocratic class and the other evolving from the servant class.

The Time Traveller also provides a logical argument for their separate evolution based on existing social norms, which made intermarriage between the classes impossible. He believes that the master-worker relationship that existed in his time (the late Victorian period) had evolved as the two classes evolved. The upper class had become increasingly dependent on their servants for all their needs.

He sees evidence of such a trend in the Eloi, who are completely dependent on the Morlocks and lack the ability to do any kind of productive or creative work. He first believes that the Morlocks have turned into a slave class who perform all their tasks and faithfully serve their masters, even though these masters are weak, childish, and unintelligent. It is also not evident to the Time Traveller how the Morlocks benefit from their continued service, apart from having a place to stay underground. So he assumes that the Morlocks mindlessly serve their masters without any kind of gain in return, indicating that they are perfect servants. According to the Time Traveller, this relationship between the Eloi and the Morlocks is the perfect social balance.

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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