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Use the passage below to answer the question.
Which pieces of evidence show that Harborough considers the shark as belonging in the ocean? Select the two correct answers.
(1 point)
"I had invaded a realm which I had
• no business to invade ... and its guardian was come to punish me."
"The shark was not passive, in the element, as I was; it was monarch of
• the waves, it could drive through them with the precision of a torpedo."
"Near the skyline rim of the superb mountain-range upon which I was commencing to rise I saw, shadowy in the translucent green, an unmistakable shape-the shape of a areat fish: a shark."
Which pieces of evidence show that Harborough considers the shark as belonging in the ocean? Select the two correct answers.
(1 point)
"I had invaded a realm which I had
• no business to invade ... and its guardian was come to punish me."
"The shark was not passive, in the element, as I was; it was monarch of
• the waves, it could drive through them with the precision of a torpedo."
"Near the skyline rim of the superb mountain-range upon which I was commencing to rise I saw, shadowy in the translucent green, an unmistakable shape-the shape of a areat fish: a shark."
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The two pieces of evidence that show Harborough considers the shark as belonging in the ocean are:
1. "The shark was not passive, in the element, as I was; it was monarch of the waves, it could drive through them with the precision of a torpedo."
2. "I had invaded a realm which I had no business to invade ... and its guardian was come to punish me."
These passages highlight the shark's dominance in its natural environment and suggest that Harborough views it as a rightful inhabitant of the ocean.
1. "The shark was not passive, in the element, as I was; it was monarch of the waves, it could drive through them with the precision of a torpedo."
2. "I had invaded a realm which I had no business to invade ... and its guardian was come to punish me."
These passages highlight the shark's dominance in its natural environment and suggest that Harborough views it as a rightful inhabitant of the ocean.
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