They would definitely be antonyms
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Answer:
Uncle anoosh
Explanation:
Where to start with Uncle Anoosh? He fills in pieces of Marji's family history, and his experiences come across to her as entertaining and heroic. He begins by telling her of his experience with Uncle Fereydoon. Fereydoon and his friends liberated the northwestern Iranian province of Azerbaijan from the influences of the shah. (This is not to be confused with, at that time, the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan). After his success, Anoosh asks to work with Fereydoon. When he goes, he notices that Fereydoon has been arrested. Anoosh flees to his family's home. Realizing that he cannot stay there, he is forced to flee to the Soviet Union.
Anoosh earns a doctorate in Marxism-Leninism during his stay in Moscow and Leningrad. This course of study clearly indicates that he is a communist. While in the Soviet Union, he marries a Russian woman, and they have two children together. Unfortunately, things between them do not work out and they divorce. Having no further reason to stay in the Soviet Union, he attempts to go back home to Iran to see his family. While passing through border security, he is recognized and immediately arrested.
The answer here is "in media res." This is used not only in Homer's writing but many other Greek writers of his time.
Inciting moment is that moment in the plot that hooks your reader or audience into the story and makes them want to continue on. Inferential meaning means that you are literally trying to infer the meaning of the story you're reading. Interpreting the plot is another thing that is exactly like it sounds like: you're the person trying to figure out what is happening with the plot in a story.
The allegorical figures of Pride, Beauty, Five-Wits (five senses), Strength, and Discretion all abandon Everyman in his hour of need. Basically, they are superficial values that people strive for during their lives. And none of them is worthy before God in the hour of death. None of them is going to alleviate the pain or help Everyman go to Heaven. These lines from the morality play should warn people that they are completely alone in this world, with only their Good Deeds to follow them beyond the grave.