<span>Whereas prejudice consists of beliefs, and discrimination is characterized by actions.
So, the option B is correct. beliefs; actions
Prejudice is a negative attitude or disposition you have for other people on the basis of race, ethnicity etc
And discrimination is an action or practice or anything what you do.</span>
Answer:
to emphasize the selfish mindset of those in authority
to ask readers to examine how power can corrupt on a personal level
Explanation:
Answer:
C)
Explanation:
A) one day he'll take his drops and keep strictly to his diet and go to bed in good time, but the next day unless I watch him he'll suddenly forget his medicine, eat sturgeon-which is forbidden-and sit up playing cards till one -clock in the morning.
B) well, even if I hadn't stayed up, this pain would have kept me awake.
C) praskovya fedororvna's attitude to ivan ilyich's illness, as she expressed it both to others and to him, was that it was his own fault and was another of the annoyances he caused her.
D) at the law courts too, ivan ilyich noticed, or thought he noticed, a strange attitude towards himself. It sometimes seemed to him that people were watching him inquisitively as a man whose place might soon be vacant.
E) as if the awful, horrible, and unheard-of thing that was going on within him, incessantly gnawing at him and irresistibly drawing him away, was a very agreeable subject for jests.
Question 4: simile
The simile in the excerpt is "His beard was as white as snow." A simile is a comparison between two things using like or as. In this simile the color of his beard is compared to the snow. As to the other options, personification is giving a nonhuman thing human-like traits. Everything in the excerpt is human. Allusion is a reference to another literary work. There is no reference. Metaphor is a comparison between two things without using like or as. This uses as so it is a simile and not a metaphor.
Question 5: He plans to pretend that he has gone mad.
When Hamlet talks about "an antic disposition", he means that he is going to change his mood to one of madness. It is important to remember that mad actually means insane or crazy, not angry.
Question 6: Hamlet is saying that his madness changes like the weather, and that he is only mad some of the time.
In this piece of dialogue Hamlet is speaking of his madness like it's the wind. The wind changes directions just like his madness can change. He is trying to tell his friends that his madness is not constant but instead changes.
Odysseus will take an oar and travel to a place where they have never seen water and make an offering to Poseidon (a ram, bull, great buck boar, and pure hecatombs - slaughter of 100 cattle or more at one time) and then he will grow old and live happily with his family. Odysseus told him that he is with Agamemnon and says that they are with "peace" and just need hospitality