Here are the answers to the questions from the image:
Questions 44-60:
These questions refer to a specific story or text that is not provided in the image. Therefore, I cannot accurately answer them without the necessary context.
SECTION C: Mary Slessor
- The writer of Mary Slessor is W.P.Livingstone.
- The character described as "white as a moon" is MarySlessor.
- The chief priest in the play is Okpo.
- Mary Slessor visited Okoyong.
- The king sent his guards to bring MarySlessor.
- The king sent messengers to arrest the so-called evil woman.
- The woman was arrested with hertwinbabies.
- The twin children were called "abominable" by thecommunity.
- The forest chosen for the twins was theevilforest.
- The king referred to the chiefpriest as "a great seer."
- "I am not an ordinary person because I have the power of the living God behind me" was said by MarySlessor.
- The gods demanded humansacrifice as sacrifice.
- The king's son was 18 years old.
- The gods of Okoyong land are called spirits.
- The king lost many sons.
- The wife of the king was sick but believed she could be healed.
- The chief who said "I am sick myself" was KingEyoHonestyII.
- Mary Slessor promised to return and build amissionhouse.
- Mary Slessor freed the recent captives because of herintervention.
- Mary Slessor freed the recent captives because of hercourage.
SECTION D: Literature & Comprehension
- The antagonist in a play is the opponent.
- The setting of a story refers to time and place.
- The repetition of vowel sounds is called assonance.
- A long narrative story is called a novel.
- A short play is called a one−actplay.
- The emotional atmosphere of a text is called mood.
- A speaker in a poem is called the persona.
- The audience participates in theperformance.
- A humorous play is called a comedy.
- A serious play is called a tragedy.
- The person who directs a play is called the director.
- A story written in paragraphs is called prose.
- A poem is made up of stanzas and lines.
- The message of a story is called the theme.
- The events in a play are called plot.
- A comparison using "like" is asimile.
3 done, 2 left today. You're making progress.