The correct answer is 3) The narrator has been insulted many times and vows revenge against Fortunato.
At one point in time when he felt that he had been insulted, the narrator decided that enough was enough and that he would have his revenge.
But Percy is terrified to be diving 600 feet, straight into the muddy waters of the Mississippi River.
The river catches Percy comfortably.
His chimera bite heals, and he feels the venom leaving him.
He realizes that he is completely dry, even though he's underwater. He also realizes that he can light a cigarette lighter underwater. Cooool.
Everything he touches becomes dry.
He also realizes that he is breathing. Underwater.
Percy hears his mom's voice in his head urging him to remember his manners, so he thanks his dad for helping him.
Percy sees Riptide in the muddy river bottom near him.
A voice says, "Percy, take the sword. Your father believes in you" (14.20).
He sees a spirit in the water. She is the color of water, and she has green eyes.
The water spirit tells Percy she is simply a messenger. She says that his mom's "fate is not as hopeless as you believe," and tells him to go to the Santa Monica beach when he reaches Los Angeles (14.24).
The water spirit messenger calls Percy "brave one" and repeats that he must go to the beach in Santa Monica. As she's leaving, she warns him not to trust any gifts.
Percy surfaces to find chaos all around him: "every emergency vehicle in St. Louis was surrounding the Arch. Police helicopters circled overhead. The crowd of onlookers reminded me of Times Square on New Year's Eve" (14.40).
Percy keeps a low profile and hooks up with Grover and Annabeth.
News reporters are reporting that Percy Jackson caused the explosion on the top of the Arch. He is now a fugitive of the law.
The three head back to their Amtrak train, which is due to depart for Denver very soon.
Answer:
The antagonist is Lily's (protagonist) father, who is struggling with accepting the past
(spoilers if you've never read the novel/seen the movie)
T. Ray, Lily's father, actually has a very complicated mindset. But let's get something out of the way, he is abusive to Lily. He hurt people because he didn't want to deal with his own emotions after Debroah's (mother of Lily) death. That being said, in some absurd way, he does care for Lily. His mindset is like this, and also keep in mind T. Ray was a huge racist too:
Beginning of the story: Hurt and angry, and doesn't know how to process it. He takes it out on Lily.
Middle of the story: Lily left, even more hurt and angry, betrayed also. He needs to find Lily before anyone hurts her (implying the ladies running the bee farm)
End of the story: Lily doesn't want to come home? He doesn't want to hurt her anymore after seeing he protest. So, after the angry rampage, he leaves her be. He accepts that she isn't in danger at all.
I don't want to write the whole thing for you, since I have no clue how you write, and also I believe you can do it! I hope this helps (I've only seen the movie so I could have missed some things)
At the end of the listening process we “assign meaning” and “provide feedback”.
<u>Explanation: </u>
The whole listening involves:
- Primary listening: we pay attention and hear the words of the person who is speaking.
- Remembering: we try to remember and store the words for us to further process it.
- Understanding/comprehending: While doing so, we simultaneously assign meaning to the information being heard and processed.
- Responding/giving feedback: ultimately we give our inputs or feedback regarding the same information according to our perspective.
Thus, this is how the whole listening process happens.
Answer:
[See Below]
Explanation:
It could be purposeful and angry, but since you capitalized will it seems more of angry then purposeful. It like the person is saying "Ok, I'll get to it just leave me alone" whereas purposeful would be more like, "Alright, I'll do it right right now."
So B, Angry.