B. direct: satellites; indirect: space
Answer:
the passengers and Twain perceive the river in very different ways.
Explanation:
Right after it, Twain continues: <em>"Now when I had mastered the language of this water and had come to know every trifling feature that bordered the great river as familiarly as I knew the letters of the alphabet, I had made a valuable acquisition."</em>
He sees the river in a different way and much is to be told from what the river shows, it seems, but passengers are not able to see what he sees because they do not share the same knowledge.
Answer:
George Orwell changed during the Spanish Civil war. The influence of the war was so strong, that he felt hate to communism and those feelings he demonstrates in Animal farm. He demonstrates the irony of pigs’ actions that do the opposite of what the mayor ordered them to do. He sows pigs as self-serving.
Explanation:
Pigs indulge many luxury things, even though they criticized men:
"<em>And remember also that in fighting against Man we must not come to resemble him. Even when you have conquered him, do not adopt his vices. No animal must ever live in a house, or sleep in a bed, or wear clothes, or drink alcohol, or smoke tobacco, or touch money, or engage in trade..."</em>
I think that this is a very good opening paragraph. I can clearly tell exactly what your writing piece will be about, and it definitely hooks me in as a reader... GOOD JOB!
The literary point of view in "The Rescue Mission" affects the reader's understanding of the story because the story is told in the first person. The character himself tells everything that's happening in the story, <em>including, as he tells, his thoughts, everything that is going through his mind.</em> He is not only describing the scenes and events from a distant point of view, without being necessarily connected to the events; <em>on the contrary, he is at the center of events, and everything told goes through his feelings and impressions before getting to the reader.</em>
<em> "I have received years of elite training for missions like this, and I have a spotless track record for at-sea rescues. Why do I always have to convince myself that I am capable of this?"</em> In the passage, it can be observed that the character is <em>talking to himself</em> while he tells the story, therefore, he is also having an <em>unintentional chat with the reader</em>, and introducing to the story his feelings, doubts, thoughts, and points of view. Therefore, it can be understood that the reader's understanding of the story is affected by the literary point of view in "The Rescue Mission" since the story is told in the first person.