A. Her triumph at being chosen over Dee to receive something
B. Her sadness that she can't get along with her sister
C. Her hopes for a long and happy married life with John Thomas
D. Her scars from having been badly burned in the house fire
D. a logical interpretation of an observation.
I feel like this answer should've included that it's on the basis of evidence and reasoning
"Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of man's heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy."
I'd say this quote is meaningful in a sense that Ralph wanted to bring an end to innocence and the darkness that dwells in one's heart. "and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy." I think this line means that he also wanted true and honest people to fall, being call "wise friend called piggy" I think means that when he is "wise" this isn't meant to be taken seriously. This is a sarcastic wkrd to describe him, for he is in fact not wise, because he wants to basically bring the end to all good that would come to man. I also chose (C) Connect because I have connected the meaning of the quote to the reader.
Answer:
C) To announce the decision of the colonies to sever their ties to England.
Explanation:
When writing, an author can use several devices in order to persuade, inform or impact the audience in the desired way. In the given excerpt from the Declaration of Independence, we can see that the main purpose is to announce the decision of the colonies to sever their ties to England, we can see that in the phrase "...it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another."
hope this helped
Ozymandias is first and foremost a metaphor for the ephemeral nature of political power, and in that sense the poem is Shelley's most outstanding political sonnet, trading the specific rage of a poem like “England in 1819” for the crushing impersonal metaphor of the statue.