I don't get the question, but if I had to guess what it'd have to be I'd say this statement is true. Many writers pushed boundaries, and experimented with what they were allowed to publish without restriction.
Answer:
Gang Orca/Sealkie
Explanation:
Okay, I know most people would choose Todoroki Shoto or Kirishima Eijiro or Dabi or whatever, but the reason I chose Gang Orca and Sealkie are because they're such powerful heroes, (and Gang Orca looks so cool) but they're literally such softies omg. GO is such a sweetheart who loves kids and is just a gold nugget. Sealkie is so flipping cute, holy- I love him he's so sweet and gentle but totally badash when he needs to be XP
In 1-A, though, I'd have to say Todoroki for boys and Ashido for girls. Shoto's so funny and sweet without even trying or realising it. Mina's just- she's hype, we stan her.
For villains definitely Twice and Dabi. Dabi's the literal whole-ash CEO of Hot Topic and Twice is a MARSHMALLOW XP
Answer:
"Like much of Poe's fiction, 'The Tell-Tale Heart' is told by an unreliable narrator. This forces the reader to draw their own conclusion about the truthfulness of the narrator instead of taking the narrator's words at face value, as readers often do in fiction."
Explanation:
Mark me brainliest
The correct answer is an interesting inciting incident.
It is something that happens in a story that makes you interested to find out the result of it - you need to know what is going to happen next, which is why you can't stop reading. This is an element of a story that good writers always use to spice things up.