By definition, a synonym is a term used to describe a given word in which it has exactly the same meaning to the other word, regardless of its spelling. Therefore, the properly matched word pairs would be:
1. deserter = renegade
<span>2. distant/cool = aloof </span>
<span>3. quarrelsome = pugnacious </span>
<span>4. serfdom = feudalism </span>
<span>5. plot = conspire </span>
<span>6. boyfriend = beau </span>
<span>7. glorify = exalt </span>
<span>8. change = transfigure </span>
<span>9. confuse = befuddle </span>
<span>10. indifferent = nonchalant</span>
Answer:
I can't face reality thats it. I'm such a ......
n always the truth turns out to be bitter
Answer:
in fahrenheit 451 it is dystopian because they live in a society where they are not allowed to read books and is the opposite of how we know fire men; we know fire men as they put out fires in this dystopian noval they set fire to any book in barriers of literature ect. and they can do that because in there society it is normal to have fire proof Houses.
Answer: The limited set of the story may be viewed in relation to the trials and tribulations that Mrs. Mallard possibly endured throughout her marriage to Brently Mallard. The staircase may signify the “ups and downs” encountered by Mrs. Mallard; it could also represent her path to freedom as she walks toward them to descend to victory. The room could represent the “box” encapsulating a person that suffers from depression or anxiety, with the window located inside the room representing the happiness that seems unattainable even though it is visible. I could equate the door to a possible exit from the situation or an object, whether physical or mental, that kept Mrs. Mallard “locked in” and unable to reach the happiness that waited outside. I was able to associate the set to the apparent despair, excitement and eventual heart-break that was experienced by Mrs. Mallard as she learned of her husband’s death, into the jubilation of being “free” and finally to her demise as she watched her husband walk through the door