Answer:
Camille's audacious character - the willingness to take risks even when not properly thought through - made her to steal the pizza delivery man's car
Explanation:
Camille liked St Hildegard, who was a Catholic Nun her school was named after. St Hildegard lived a thousand years before Camille and lived in Germany.
The text tells us that Camille loved St. Hildegard audacity as well as her far-ranging mind and wanted to emulate her though in an 'anti' way.
She reasoned that if she couldn't be pious as a Hildegard as a Nun, she could at least express St Hildegard's audacity, though in a negative way.
The open door of the running car of the pizza delivery man gave Camille the opportunity to explore her adventurous audacious spirit.
Despite not knowing how to drive nor having her driver's license, Camille's audaciousness made her jump into the running car of the delivery man and run it into a pond.
The following sentence is punctuated properly: "I need to know whether you are able to perform the following functions of the job: revising existing marketing materials, promoting the company at trade shows, and reaching potential customers through direct mail campaigns." (3).
There should be a colon after the first clause because the second part of the sentence is a list of items (in this case, a list of the "functions of the job").
A comma would be too weak in this case because it would fail to express this idea of a list of specific examples completing the independent clause.
A semicolon would be inaccurate because they are usually used between two independent clauses when you don't want to link them with a conjunction (like <em>and</em>). They are stronger than a comma and weaker than a period. In this sentence however, the second part is not an independent clause but a list without a verb.
Answer:
Chinua Achebe describes Unoka and Okonkwo as ill-fated
Explanation:
In Chapter 3 of Things Fall Apart, Achebe writes:
Unoka was an ill-fated man. He had a bad chi or personal god, and evil fortune followed him to the grave, or rather to his death, for he had no grave. He died of the swelling which was an abomination to the earth goddess...He was carried to the Evil Forest and left to die.
Okonkwo attempts to determine his own fate. Knowing his father was a failure, he works the yam fields twice as hard to compensate. However, Okonwko is also a character in a tragedy, both personal and cultural (both he and his tribe will "fall apart" and die). In tragedies, characters are engineered for a downfall. Obviously, as a character, Okonkwo has no control over his and his tribe's death. Yet, Okonkwo fights to the death, regardless. So, in a way, he chooses his fate by beheading the messenger. He chooses to be placed in a situation which allows him to be aggressive and violent so as to cause his own self-destruction by violent means.
Odysseus was warned not to do B. Eat the Sun God's (Helios') cattle. This is because his men would end up dying and he would "Return home a broken man having lost his shipmates".