Answer: Hello there! I wish that there was a bit more context/info about the photo in question, but believe that your answer is A. If not, it may be C.
Explanation: <u>For Choice A</u> - One thing that snapshots and butterflies share is their swiftness. Images can be taken in the blink of an eye, while our little winged friends can flutter their wings fast as lightning.
My reasoning for <u>Choice C</u> is a bit different and concerns the values of both objects. Snapshots hold precious memories within them, while the beauty of a butterfly is, similarly, cherished by many people, thus creating a tone that's meant to make the reader feel emotional over them both.
<em>Extra reasoning if needed: </em>
Choice B - I didn't feel that this was the right answer because the tone just didn't awestruck to me...? (I think it just would've been better if I had more context or the excerpt of the poem to help me with my decision.)
Choice D - The colorfulness of a butterfly isn't alluded to in this part of the poem.
I apologize for not being able to give a very definite answer, but I hope that this may help you with your assignment/process of elimination somehow!
B is the correct marking because they quoted the teacher and used his quote in first person as if he was saying it again
Answer:
"any acts or threats of acts intended to hurt or make women suffer physically, sexually or psychologically, and which affect women because they are women or affect women disproportionately".
Explanation:
This is gender based violence and it happens to non-binary people, Cisgender women, transgender women, and transgender men.
The prefix and root in the word "reject" as they are used in sentence 2 give us an approximate definition. Which of the following definitions is accurate?
2. To Throw away
Chrysanthemums are the central symbol of life, vital energies, sexuality in the story. Just like Elisa herself, they need nurturing and attendance. She lives a boring and unfulfilled life in a dull, loveless marriage, and she has never had a chance of finding her true self, except in the garden. That is why she commits to gardening so eagerly: because she couldn't bear to see those flowers withered. At the end of the story, she sees her chrysanthemums on the road, thrown away, "a dark speck" as Steinbeck says. They are wasted, just like Elisa's life, love, and happiness.