In Percy Jackson, what does Percy think is odd about the furies searching for an object

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Answer 1
Answer: Grover tells Percy that, when the Furies found them on the bus, they were asking, "where is it?" rather than "where is he?" It seems they are looking for an object, rather than a human.
Answer 2
Answer:

Because the furies are from Hades, and everyone knows (thinks) that he stolen the Master Bolt. So he’s wondering why they would be searching for the Master bolt when they already have it


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- I was very surprised when my friend said that ...............................................................................................................​

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she was going to move away???

What does 2nd and 3rd person mean?

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~ Point of View ~
Second person is a point of view when the narrator tells the story to someone else using the words, "you, you're, your, etc." An example of second person is instructions or directions. It is telling YOU what to do. Basically giving commands or telling the reader what to do.
There are three types of Third Person:
* Third Person Limited - The story adheres to one character's perspective. The narrator knows all things about this character, but only this one character.
* Third Person Omniscient - The narrator know all of the thought and feelings of each character in the story. Looks into the mind of more than one character.
*Third person Objective - The narrator tells the story without describing a character's thoughts or feelings. (Not commenly used.)
Third person in general is a story being told by someone not in the story. Expressed using the words, "he, she, they, her, him, etc."

Plez help it's a emergency

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The first passage could be organized in a number of the different organizers, but the order of importance/sequence is probably the best option.  The second one should be organized in the problem/solution organizer.

Now all you have to do is sketch the two organizers and summarize facts from the passage to fill them in.

What is the tense of the underlined verb in the sentence? The baby turtles swam to the shore.   A. present   B. past perfect   C. future   D. past   flew is underlined  Which verb best completes this sentence? 

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D is the answer that you are looking for.
D past because it has the w

What is they style of sound of thunder

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"A Sound of Thunder" Bradbury employs metaphor, simile, parallelism, irony, and paradox. In the exposition of the story Bradbury writes in metaphor and simile, using parallelism to enhance the poetic quality of his diction: ... Time doesn't present that kind of mess," a foreshadowing of the story's end.

I need the falling action and resolution from the cay by Theodore Taylor chapter 7

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The series of events that take place after a story's climax is known as a falling action. The conflict is resolved, and the loose ends are tied up by the falling action. Typically, it leads to the resolution, which is the end of the story.

What is the falling action of the cay?

Utilizing the survival techniques Timothy taught him, Phillip buryes Timothy and stays on the cay. He rebuilds a brush pile for a signal fire after the hurricane and starts it when he hears a jet overhead.

All of the action that occurs right after the climax is considered falling action. Falling action serves to move the narrative from a climax to a resolution.

It's one of the most important components of any story, along with the exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and denouement.

Therefore, the series of events that take place after a story's climax is known as a falling action. The conflict is resolved, and the loose ends are tied up by the falling action. Typically, it leads to the resolution, which is the end of the story.

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Most of these terms (exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution) are the general sections of any story. They help you organize a story in your mind and visualize it as a structured set of events.

Although I'll say that, for example, the exposition of The Cay is Chapters 1-2, and that the rising action is Chapters 3-11 and so on, other readers might have slightly different ways to make those divisions. But the general idea is that these terms help us make a map of the plot in order to understand it.

First, the exposition of any story is the very beginning, where we learn what the setting is, who the characters are, and what they basically want. 

So, you can find the exposition of The Cay in Chapters 1 and 2, when Phillip and his parents are wondering whether they should try to leave their Dutch island of Curacao to head to Virginia, where it might be safer. We learn that World War II is going on, and that there are shortages of food and water where Phillip is.

After the exposition comes the rising action, when, basically, action starts happening!

The rising action of The Cay comprises Chapters 3 through 11, when Phillip and his mom board the ship to head for Virginia, a torpedo causes their ship to sink, and Phillip ends up on a raft with an old black man named Timothy. They float in the middle of the ocean, hopelessly, until they finally reach a tiny deserted island, and they busy themselves with making a temporary camp there. They build a signal fire so that they might get rescued, and after some tense conversations, Phillip realizes that he respects Timothy and wants to be his friend. Timothy wonders if they are cursed with bad luck.

After the rising action comes the climax: the most exciting part, or the most difficult experience that the main character must endure. Some stories have more than one climax, and different readers could disagree about which one is "the" climax or the most important one.

In The Cay, I'll say that the first climax is in Chapter 12, when Timothy becomes extremely sick with malaria. That's when readers realize that Phillip will be totally alone and helpless if Timothy dies, and it's when Phillip really has to struggle hard to learn to feed himself and keep himself safe from hurricanes.

The second climax is in Chapter 15, when the hurricane hits and both characters have their strength tested by wind and waves. Because this event is so dramatic and chaotic, with so many preparations beforehand and so many repercussions afterward, it's probably the climax that most readers would identify as the more important one.

Falling action is all the events that occur after the climax(es). For The Cay, the falling action is Timothy's death at the end of Chapter 15, followed by Phillip's mournful thoughts and continual, solitary work to keep himself fed and alive on the cay, alone, throughout Chapters 16-18.

And lastly, the resolution is how the story ends. In other words, how is the conflict resolved, or how does the struggle end? Who wins?

In The Cay, the resolution takes place in Chapter 19, when Phillip is finally rescued from the cay, and he is united with his parents.

 

Let's consider the conflict separately from all the previous elements. Conflict is present in any of those sections of a story, but most notably the rising action and the climax. Conflict is when characters struggle: when they have experiences that are difficult or that require them to adapt and learn. You can specify what kind of conflict is going on by saying who or what the character is struggling against.

In The Cay, the conflict is between:

Phillip and his own misunderstanding of and racism toward black peoplePhillip and his own new blindness, including his struggle to be self-sufficientPhillip and Timothy, as the boy realizes that the old man is not his enemy but his friend and his only hope for survivalTimothy and his malariaThe two people and nature: the conditions on the cay, especially the hurricane, present major difficulties