Question
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Question
Use the story “The Open Window” to answer the question.
How does the author present the details of the setting in the last paragraph of the excerpt?
(1 point)
Responses
The description of the door, drive, and gate highlight the fact that many things go wrong at once for Nuttel.
The description of the door, drive, and gate highlight the fact that many things go wrong at once for Nuttel.
The sequence involving the door, drive, and gate is framed by the perceptions of a cyclist on the road.
The sequence involving the door, drive, and gate is framed by the perceptions of a cyclist on the road.
The details of door, drive, and gate are framed through Nuttel’s hasty, panicky perceptions as he flees the house.
The details of door, drive, and gate are framed through Nuttel’s hasty, panicky perceptions as he flees the house.
The door, drive, and gate are carefully described to indicate the length of Nuttel’s frightened dash.
Question
Use the story “The Open Window” to answer the question.
How does the author present the details of the setting in the last paragraph of the excerpt?
(1 point)
Responses
The description of the door, drive, and gate highlight the fact that many things go wrong at once for Nuttel.
The description of the door, drive, and gate highlight the fact that many things go wrong at once for Nuttel.
The sequence involving the door, drive, and gate is framed by the perceptions of a cyclist on the road.
The sequence involving the door, drive, and gate is framed by the perceptions of a cyclist on the road.
The details of door, drive, and gate are framed through Nuttel’s hasty, panicky perceptions as he flees the house.
The details of door, drive, and gate are framed through Nuttel’s hasty, panicky perceptions as he flees the house.
The door, drive, and gate are carefully described to indicate the length of Nuttel’s frightened dash.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The details of door, drive, and gate are framed through Nuttel’s hasty, panicky perceptions as he flees the house.