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One of the bird eating spiders is the Goliath Bird Eating Spider, a type of tarantula. Other spiders can eat birds also. In August 2009, a photograph was taken of a giant spider, a Golden Orb weaver, eating a bird in a backyard near Cairns, Australia. See the story at the related link below.
Yes. The Goliath Bird Eating Spider can. It is a tarantula, and its diet consists of frogs, bugs, small snakes, lizards and small birds. More information can be found at the related link. In August 2009, a photograph was taken of a giant Golden Orb spider eating a bird in a backyard near Cairns, Australia. See the story at the related link below.
who is lencho in the story of litter god
Crocodile tears syndrome is a medical term which describes a person who lacrimates, or tears, while eating, which is due to a nerve being re-routed from the salivary gland to the lacrimal gland due to a lesion.
Well it depends on the book. If the adventure story could happen in real life and is not made up then it is not a fantasy, but if it the adventure book is made up and would never happen in real life then it is fantasy. (An adventure story is usually a story where the character(s) are taking a trip or a journey. A fantasy story is made up.)
In "The Veldt," George and Lydia are killed by their children's thought-created lions in the virtual reality nursery. The children had been using the nursery to bring their fantasies to life, leading to a tragic end for their parents.
In the ending of "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury, the children trap their parents in the virtual reality nursery to be devoured by lions. The story highlights the dangers of technology, the impact of parental neglect, and the consequences of allowing machines to replace human connections.
In "The Veldt," the nursery itself symbolizes technology's potential to consume and replace human relationships. The lions in the African veldt represent the children's suppressed aggression and desire for control. Finally, the nursery walls serve as a symbol of how technology can distort reality and blur the lines between imagination and reality.
Bradbury foreshadows the end of the story in "The Veldt" by introducing the threatening nature of the nursery and the children's obsession with the veldt. The violent and lifelike qualities of the virtual reality nursery, coupled with the children's defiance towards their parents, hint at a darker outcome. Ultimately, the children's ability to manifest their fantasies in the nursery leads to a tragic and unexpected conclusion.
The climax of "The Veldt" occurs when the parents discover their own likenesses being devoured by lions in the virtual reality nursery that their children, Wendy and Peter, have been using. This moment marks the realization of the deadly consequences of the children's obsession with the nursery and sets the stage for the story's resolution.
"Those screams are familiar.."is the most obvious use of foreshadowing.
In Ray Bradbury's short story "The Veldt," the flashback involves the parents witnessing the nursery's African veldt simulation, where they see their children using high-tech virtual reality to create lifelike scenes of hunting and violence. This flashback highlights the parents' growing unease with their children's obsession with the nursery and raises questions about the impact of technology on family dynamics.
In "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury, the initiating force is the high-tech nursery that can create any realistic environment requested by the children, Peter and Wendy. The nursery becomes a significant force in the story as it takes on a life of its own and the children's obsession with it leads to a dark turn of events.
In the short story "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury, the parents do not explicitly die at the end. However, there are hints that the children's control over the technology in the nursery may lead to their demise. It is left open to interpretation.
In the short story "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury, the wallet and the scarf are found in the virtual reality nursery created by the children's parents. The nursery is a room that can manifest any scene the children imagine, including the items left behind by their parents, symbolizing the children's fierce attachment to the technology and their desire for control. The presence of these real-world objects in the nursery blurs the line between the virtual and the physical, highlighting the dangers of technology when unchecked by parental authority.
The sensory details in "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury emphasize the oppressive heat and dryness of the African veldt, with descriptions of the burning sun, the smell of scorched grass, and the distant roar of lions. These details create a sense of foreboding and isolation in the story.
In the story "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury, the parents become upset about the African veldt because their children's virtual reality nursery seems to be fixated on this violent and dangerous setting. The parents realize that the technology in their house has allowed their children to become too obsessed with this virtual world, raising concerns about the impact on their behavior and mental health.