Answer:
The correct answer is either hand; modifies basketball.
Explanation:
Let's start by clarifying that the adverb is one that modifies a verb, a noun, an adjective or more words.
In this case we find the adverb phrase "either hand". This adverbial phrase is modifying the noun "basketball", and is the one that gives us more information about the way the ball is going to be thrown.
Answer:
Is it fun to learn about insect colonies?
Explanation:
Irony would be the correct answer
Utterson promises Dr. Jekyll that he will bear with hyde and get his rights for him and that Hyde gets justice. He also promises to help him when Dr. Jekyll is never there.
The motif of marigolds is juxtaposed to the grim, dusty, crumbling landscape from the very beginning of the story. They are an isolated symbol of beauty, as opposed to all the mischief and squalor the characters live in. The moment Lizabeth and the other children throw rocks at the marigolds, "beheading" a couple of them, is the beginning of Lizabeth's maturation. The culmination is the moment she hears her father sobbing, goes out into the night and destroys the perfect flowers in a moment of powerless despair. Then she sees the old woman, Miss Lottie, and doesn't perceive her as a witch anymore. Miss Lottie is just an old, broken woman, incredibly sad because the only beauty she had managed to create and nurture is now destroyed. This image of the real Miss Lottie is juxtaposed to the image of her as an old witch that the children were afraid of. Actually, it is the same person; but Lizabeth is not the same little girl anymore. She suddenly grows up, realizing how the woman really feels, and she is finally able to identify and sympathize with her.