Answer:
Produce,nearby,convenient
Explanation:
The answer is D: The search for self.
Although this is not an exclusively literary modernist theme, it sure was one of the main themes that Virginia Woolf, one of the most notable modernist writers, developed. Throughout this novel, and specifically in the excerpt cited, Mrs. Dalloway, as well as many other female and male characters, continually expose their train of thoughts (“stream of consciousness” as it usually is called in literary studies) as the struggle to identify their personal subjectivity, showing a constant struggle and an intermittent quest for one´s own self.
Billy's father says they can't stay with grandpa and grandma cook because he and Billy's mother are getting a divorce.
Because of the fact that Billy's parents are separating, he can no longer stay with his grandparents, but rather go to a court where the judge will decide where the child will live from now on - whether that is going to be with his mom or his dad.
Answer:
The option that would most likely function as the exposition in a story is:
A. We had been working for months to restore the house to its original glory.
Explanation:
<u>The exposition of a story is the moment when the author sets the stage for what is going to happen. In other words, it functions as the introduction of the story, where we get to know the setting, the characters, and begin to understand the context in which the plot will unfold.</u>
Therefore, the exposition should present information that will be developed, that is, introductory information. When we analyze the options given in the question, we can see that B, C, and D are more likely to be used in other moments in the story. They demand context. If they were the very first sentence in a story, for instance, we would be taken aback, having no idea what is going on. Why is Shannon trying to go from the raft to the boat? What project is she talking about - and who is she, for that matter? What contest is this and who is talking about it?
<u>Now, option A sounds much more like an introduction. We do not know who the speaker is yet, but now we know that he/she and someone else have been working on renovating a house. It is easy to see that this piece of information will be further developed: we will be told who the speaker is, whose house it is, etc.</u>
What is the situational irony in the story federigo's Falcon by Giovanni Boccaccio.
The correct answer is B Mona’s son has a terminal illness so the Falcon can’t save him.
It is ironical that the reason Mona’s son had to keep alive, was the reason that then he dad to finally die. Mona went for the falcon to save his son’s live, but without expecting it, she was ending his life, because she did not know what Federigo was capable of doing just to please the love of his life. One fact that makes the situation more ironical, it is Mona visiting a man she did not expect to visit once in her life, and she just did it for her son’s life. This interested visit had a high price to pay, this abnormal action demanded from life a cost to bear. All what Federigo gave from his life to be with Mona, now was getting back in a very unreasonably manner. Federigo’s wealth had to disappear and Mona’s son’s precious life gone too, for both of them to be together. Mona “would rather have a man who lacks money than money that lacks a man.”