10.1 Bespeek die verskille tussen lang-, medium- en kortte…

Questions

10.1 Bespeek die verskille tussen lаng-, medium- en kоrttermyn dоelwitte.                                        (3)

Which оf the fоllоwing substаnces аre in red, blue, аnd purple fruits and vegetables that have antioxidant activity? 

Pаrt I:   Identificаtiоn (50 Pоints):      Identify the cоrrect chаracter or term.   Note: some names may be used more than once, some not at all.                                        Dee                                        Hakim-a-Barber                             Charley Simmons  Mr. Gorman                           Pluto                                               “The Black Cat” Narrator Harold Krebs                         John Wright                                    Krebs’ father                        Madame Forrestier              Maggie                                              Martha Hale                        Mathilde Loisel                     Minnie Wright                                 Mr. Hale       Mother Johnson                   Mr. Loisel                                          Mr. Peters                            Mr. Henderson                     Krebs’ mother                                   Mrs. Peters                                                 Helen                                     Wife in “The Black Cat”                  Miss Raye (Charles’ sister) Charles Bradford Raye         Anna                                                 Edith Harnham “S.I.W.”                                   “Disabled”                                         “Dulce et Decorum Est” “The Sentry”                          “The Tuft of Flowers”                      “Desert Places” “Mending Wall”                     “The Wood-Pile”    Krebs’ mother wants her son to be like this person, a “credit to the community” who has a good job and is about to be married.  The last line of this poem is “Tim died smiling.”  In this poem, a butterfly leads the speaker to notice “A leaping tongue of bloom the scythe had spared /Beside a reedy brook the scythe had bared.”  The last line of this poem is “Good fences make good neighbors.” When she was a girl, her kitten was brutally killed by a boy, right before her eyes. In her daydreams, she imagines dining on the “pink meat of a trout” or “the delicate wing of a quail."   He stopped at the Wright house on that fateful morning “to see if I can't get John Wright to take a telephone.”  She says to her sister, "It's really a new day for us. But from the way you and Mama live you'd never know it.”  She gets an axe buried in her brain and her body is walled up in the basement.   The only things she asks for while she is in prison are her shawl and her apron.  The Roman equivalent to Hades in Greek mythology, this is the name of the God of the Underworld; it is also the name of a cat in one of Poe’s stories.  He died from “a rope round his neck”; in other words, strangulation.  He had set aside 400 francs for a new shotgun, but gave that money to his wife instead so that she could buy a new dress.  When Mathilde sees this woman at the end of the story, she is pushing a baby stroller and is still beautiful, even after ten years.  15.   The county attorney, he looks inside Minnie Wright’s cupboards and says, “Here’s a nice mess.” 16. Through her tears, she says to her son, "I held you next to my heart when you were a tiny baby.” 17. She says about herself, “I can kill and clean a hog as mercilessly as a man. My fat keeps me hot in zero weather.” At the Chancellor's dinner party, she "danced joyfully, passionately, intoxicated with pleasure, thinking of nothing but the  moment in the triumph of her beauty."   He loved animals so much that he “had birds, gold-fish, a fine dog, rabbits, a small monkey, and a cat” as pets. He is described as a “a short, stocky man” with “hair is all over his head a foot long and hanging from his chin like a kinky mule tail. A chlorine gas attack takes place in this poem; one soldier is not able to get his mask on in time and dies an excruciating death. Ever since the fire that scarred her, this person has walked “chin on chest, eyes on ground, feet in shuffle.” In hot weather, she is wearing a “dress down to the ground” one that is “so loud it hurts” her mother’s eyes:  “There are yellows and oranges enough to throw back the light of the sun.” Before the war, there was a picture taken of him with his fraternity brothers, “all of them wearing exactly the same height and style collar.” Mrs. Wright’s neighbor, this woman defends her to the men in the story, saying, “"The law is the law--and a bad stove is a bad stove. How'd you like to cook on this?” She thinks to herself, “I wish his child was mine—I wish it was!” before uttering, “How can I say such a wicked thing?” In this poem, the speaker says the wounded soldier's eyeballs "huge-bulged like squids.” She had grown up in an aunt’s care on the Great Wessex Plain, was never given an education, and therefore, much to her shame, “could neither read nor write.” In this poem, the soldier enlists after he had “drunk a peg,” and because someone said, he'd "look a god" in kilts. He says, “What matter! . . . It serves me right” when told the truth about his new wife’s lack of learning. In this poem, the speaker finds a cord of maple and notices how  “Clematis /Had wound strings round and round it like a bundle.” She had led a “lonely life,” having married an “elderly wine merchant,” only to find out shortly afterward that “she had made a mistake.” In this poem, Robert Frost, discussing the emptiness in each human being, says,  “They cannot scare me with their empty spaces /Between stars – on stars where no human race is.” When his mother says about God, there can be no idle hands in His kingdom, this person responds, “I am not in His kingdom.” She is impressed with the letters from Anna, telling her brother, “She seems fairly educated . . . And bright in ideas. She expresses herself with a taste that must be innate.” This poem mentions “children” who are “ardent for some desperate glory.” If one knew of the true horrors of war, one wouldn’t tell “the old lie” to those children with such “high zest.”