1. After Bill Sykes killed Nancy, he was on the run, but after police identified him as travelling with a dog, he attempts to drown the dog to rid himself of a companion, as well as deeming himself less of a suspect.
2. Bill Sykes killed Nancy.
3. Edward Leedford
4. I don’t know this one!
5. Mr Brownlow.
6. He shoots her in the head, but this only grazes her forehead, so he picks up a club and beats her on the wound until she dies.
7. Agnes Fleming (his dead mother), Edwin Leeford (his dead father) and Edward Leeford (his dead half brother).
8. She steals her gold locket, the only clue to Oliver’s identity.
9. She rejects him for fear that marriage to her may harm his career in church.
10. Bill Sykes.
I answered all of them apart from one I didn’t know, so I hope this helps!
what exactly is suppose to be doe though?
The two correct answers are “Helmer thinks that Krogstad's vengeance will be against him, but the audience knows that Krogstad will take vengeance against Nora and her reputation as an honest woman” and “Helmer thinks that Nora's worry about him is related to his reputation and is a sign of her love for him, while the audience knows that it is the risk she took to get a loan that shows her love”. Taken from the three-act play called “<em>A Doll's House</em>” by Henrik Ibsen (1879), in Act Two there are instances of dramatic irony that the reader can easily spot. As regards “<u>dramatic irony</u>”, it is a stylistic device that storytellers use for creating situations in which <u>the audience knows more about the situations before the actors</u>. For instance, the audience already knows that Krogstad will take vengeance against Nora and not against Helmer after being fired by him (<u>First correct answer</u>). Moreover, the audience also knows that Nora’s worry is not about Helmer’s reputation but it is about the risk to have gotten a loan breaking the law by forging her father's name on the loan in order to save her husband (<u>Second correct answer</u>).
Answer: In searching for a sea route to the East, England first tried to find a route around Russia