Answer:
The answer is (B) because it's dependent clause
Answer: Balboa: Finder of the Pacific is technically a biography, as it relates most of the important events in the life of a famous figure, but Sir Ronald Syme has created a narrative that resembles an adventure story more than a personal documentary. Rather than beginning at Vasco Núñez de Balboa’s birth or tracing his family background, the story starts with a scene between the seventeen-year-old Balboa and his father at the point in his life when Balboa’s career as an explorer began. The ensuing narrative follows his life by marking out the stages of that career: It is in Balboa the explorer only that Syme is interested.
Hi,
I think the best choice would be D, <span>-When he dies, he will no longer be able to hear the song of the nightingale.
~Elisabeth</span>
The reason we use monsters in literature then? The role they play? There is no singular one. But I personally believe that we use monsters to take everything we dislike about ourselves as humans, and also all of those animalistic instincts we suppress, and put them into one form. We lock those beings in a cupboard or shove them under our beds so that we never have to look at them. And we take them out when we want to create a story - when we want to speculate from far away and see what happens. In that regard, every piece of artwork ever developed starring a monster and a hero is a constructed, thoroughly planned social experiment.
The answer is C.
I hope that helps