The Hunchback of Notre-Dame<span> (</span>French<span>: </span>Notre-Dame de Paris<span>) is a </span>French Romantic/Gothic novel<span> by </span>Victor Hugo<span>, published in </span>1831<span>. The original French title refers to </span>Notre Dame Cathedral<span>, on which the story is centered. English translator </span>Frederic Shoberl<span> named the novel </span>The Hunchback of Notre Dame<span> in 1833 because, at the time, Gothic novels were more popular than Romance novels in England.</span>[1]<span> The story is set in </span>Paris, France<span> in the </span>Late Middle Ages<span>, during the reign of </span>Louis XI<span>.</span>
Answer:
Postgraduate university studies.
They should of been walking back from the movie right before the car pulled up beside them
Answer:
D. That the reader has the background knowledge to understand the allusion
Explanation:
If there is an allusion to Venus the goddess of beauty, the counterpart of Aphrodite(Greek Mythology), someone who does not have any background knowledge about Roman mythology or mythology in general would assume the writer is referring to Venus, the planet rather than the goddess.
In order to understand an allusion as used by a writer, the reader must have adequate knowledge as this was expected of the reader by the writer.