Answer:
Westerberg's assessment tries to show Chris's transcendental nature, aiming to express what happened to him.
Explanation:
Westerberg, in his assessment shown above, tries to explain Chris, introducing him as a thoughtful, intelligent person with a transcendental nature that caused him to be lost. Westerberg shows that Chris tried to use his brilliant and active mind to find a way to understand the society around him. When he failed in that goal, he tried to transcend himself, to seek improvement on his own, which led him to abandon society altogether and look for something inaccessible.
Answer:
mine is also same question if you get the answer kindly help me out then
Explanation:
Internal conflict is the point at which a character has to decide to admit to themselves what the issue going on in their head is and to take some sort of action on it. For some characters such as Dante (Dante's Inferno), this is dealing with depression and seeing the things that await him in Hell if he commits suicide. For others, it's working an issue that is a part of their past, such as PTSD flashbacks from war.
I'm not entirely sure how to say where in a story this conflict takes place, as it varies from piece to piece. Hopefully, however, this provides some better understanding of the concept.
The underlined pronoun <em>who </em>is used as a D) subject in this sentence. The subject is the doer of the action, the one who left mittens on the ground, in this case.