Answer:
Answer:
A: When you give something a chance, sometimes your opinion of it may change for the better.
Explanation:
While reading the story, Tanisha thinks of the camera in a negative light, only saying bad things about it, and when she finally decides to use it it's out of boredom and not curiosity (She is only curious about why her father values it so much.)
B If that was the author's point, they would've included more nature in the story, and not make Tanisha's feelings about the camera so visible.
C If the author's point was to bash social media and blame it for the world's problems, they wouldn't have talked much about the antique camera, focusing more on Tanisha's life on social media and making it a bigger problem throughout the story.
D The author didn't mention Tanisha's father a lot, except for when Tanisha was thinking back to how she got the camera. They also didn't push the father's opinions onto the reader, he only valued the camera and gifted it to his daughter. Although they don't need to have somebody's opinions pushed onto you to get their point across, it would've made this option make more sense if that was their point.
Answer:
The evil that men do is remembered, but the good they have done is often buried with them.
Explanation:
According to the given excerpt, Antony makes a speech at the funeral of Caesar and he talks about how good of a man Caesar was, even though he mentioned that the evil men do live after them. He spoke of how the "noble" Brutus described the late Caesar as an ambitious man, and that he believes Brutus's words, even though Caesar was his friend.
Therefore, the modern meaning of the first two lines of the passage means that the evil that men do is remembered, but the good they have done is often buried with them.
During party one wears some oddly questionable clothes.Please stop somewhere and buy me food to eat.
Answer:
Anglo-Saxon culture that it was important to risk your life to win battles, especially battles for revenge of loved ones. The big mother presents this aspect of Anglo-Saxon culture because she risks to fight and avenge her son's death.
Explanation:
The Anglo-Saxon heroic code put the battles on a level of high importance, for them the battles were more important than life itself. This intensified when the battle was aimed at avenging a relative or a friend. For the Anglo-Saxons a true warrior would risk his own life if it meant getting revenge for vile acts that someone committed with his loved ones.
Grendel's mother is a strong example of this concept, as she sets out to fight the powerful warrior who killed her son to avenge him. She knows that the warrior can kill her too, but she prefers to risk her own life so that her son can be avenged.