The ending of "The Most Dangerous Game" and "The Sniper" are different in that the former is originally the prey of the antagonist, General Zaroff, while the latter is a killer by choice. Rainsford falls off of a boat and survives by arriving at an isolated island whereas the Sniper is a Republican soldier positioned on the rooftop of a building in Dublin. At the end of the story, Rainsford turns the tables on General Zaroff by swimming to his enormous home, sneaking into his bedroom and killing him. At the end of "The Sniper" the Republican shoots a man, feels triumphant, but when he comes down off of the roof, he looks at the body only to discover with horror that he had killed his own brother. While both endings are somewhat shocking, "The Sniper" is moreso as the character realizes he made a horrible mistake. In "The Most Dangerous Game" the evil General Zaroff gets his due as he's a psycopathic killer.
B) six
False
Set free
Be free and equal
False
<em>The orchard walls are high and hard to climb, And the place death, considering who thou art, If </em><em>any</em><em> of my kinsmen find thee here.</em>
<em>Any</em> is the indefinite pronoun because it means something like "it does not matter who of my kinsmen as long as the person is one of my kinsmen" although Present Day English demands agreement as third person singular (<em>if any of you agree</em><em>s</em>) in the passage the agreement is third person plural because from the point of view of meaning [<em>any of my kinsmen</em>] can be replaced as <em>they</em> and the verb <em>find</em> agrees with this plural idea.
Present Day British English has this kind of agreement called collective noun which grammatically can function like the pronoun <em>they</em>, for example as in <em>the committee </em><em>have</em><em> started the meeting</em>). The word <em>police</em> is another example of collective noun by taking third person plural agreement as in the sentence <em>The police </em><em>have </em><em>arrived</em>.
To look at someone with pleasure
<span>B. Remain
</span>Which one of these verbs would generally suggest a state of being?REMAIN
NOT:
A. Educate
<span>C. Cooperate </span>
<span>D. Think</span>