"Penalty" shows a particularly strong connotation. Your answer would be the word penalty.
Answer:
this quote is significant to the story because it is describing a place where the gods once were worshiped.
Explanation:
do not use this answer if you are taking an exam because I am not entirely sure if this is the right answer
Answer: I believe the answer would be C. What makes things happen.
Explanation:
<u>Answer:</u>
Based on the excerpt, the most reasonable plot prediction is that (A) Farquhar may unknowingly walk into a trap.
<u>Explanation:</u>
“An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” by “Ambrose Bierce” is a story set during American Civil War. The soldier had disguised himself and he was a scout. Gradually in the story we come to know that 'Farquhar' had been set up through a tricky play. So, the correct option is option A.
Farquhar is a supporter of confederate. Thinking that the soldier that came is confederate he informed about the movements of the Union soldiers, thinking Confederate could win the war with this information. But the 'Confederate soldier' was a Union soldier in disguise.
We determine a story's point of view by the narrator's position through describing settings and events.
The first-person point of view is used when a character tells the story. They use the word "I" to describe what is happening. They can write about the feelings and reactions to events that unfold from their point of view.
Example: I woke up late and missed the bus to school.
Stories written from the second-person point of view is when a story is told to you. This one is common in nonfiction writing.
Example: You are reading the descriptions of different points of view found in writing.
Third-person stories are written by a narrator who is not part of the story. "He", "she", and/or "it" are used to describe characters in the story. The narrator may only know what one character knows (limited), what a few characters know (multiple) or what all characters know (omniscient).
A narrator who is also in the story is telling the story from the first-person point of view. They're putting themselves in the story.