You should try the second option ( hyperbole)
The dude above me is right I got the answer correct:)
Answer:
While school is necessary to gain abundance of knowledge, there are other ways you can obtain knowledge without going to school:
- Some students learn outside of school by doing home-tuition. It is similar to school, only that you learn your subjects at home.
- Another way is self-tutoring. You can study at home using the help of online websites, books, and advise of parents.
Answer:
Emily Bronte succeeded in ending <em>Wuthering Heights </em>with the message that love overcomes hate by the union of Hareton and young Catherine after the enormous hate they received from Heathcliff.
Explanation:
In <em>Wuthering Heights, </em>Emily Bronte the author writes a tale about largely unlikable persons that are caught up in an obsessive love that turns to dark madness. The novel is cruel, violent, dark, brooding and some readers find it unpleasant.
The novel is about Heathcliff and Catherine and the deep love they have for each other. Heathcliff is love-struck by Catherine and can not bear to be away from her although he has a strong personality that shows he can bear almost anything, except that. Catherine is Heathcliff's foster sister.
Unfortunately, Catherine betrays his love by getting married to Edgar Linton because of the pressures of social convention. Heathcliff leaves the area and comes back after three years after Catherine's marriage and he vows revenge on all who wronged him.
He lends Hindley money that he knows he cannot pay back and as a result inherits the manor then he marries Isabella Linton and treats her cruelly. Heathcliff has a son Hareton and Catherine has a daughter who was named after her and after Heathcliff dies, they both get married.
The promontories that Bede describes in A History of the English Church and People are peaks of high coastal land.
The word 'promontory' refers to the highest part of an area, especially one that extends into some water, like sea or lake. Venerable Bede was an English monk who wrote the history of the church and the people in England. It is an important document describing what life was life at the time, as well as giving an overview of English history.