A. A second black cat, very similar to the narrator's first cat, appears out of nowhere.
In Edgar Allan Poe's "The Black Cat," the events that seem to prove the wife's superstition about the cats correct include the appearance of a second cat resembling Pluto, the first cat, after the narrator kills Pluto. This second cat also has a white patch on its chest, similar to the original cat. Additionally, the second cat leads the narrator to the police's discovery of his crime by meowing behind the wall where he has hidden his wife's body, seemingly confirming the wife's belief in the supernatural connection between the cats and their fate.
Real small
That is the correct spelling of the verb "prove" (establish as fact).
She sat at the front of the bus to prove that no matter what color you are white,black,Mexican,Asian,or Chinese you should have equal rights.
"have taken" is correct
It depends which superstitions you believe.If you arrived unwashed for a job interview because of such a supersition it would likely prove that superstition fallacious.
It was Galileo.
False
False
The opposite of refute is to prove correct.
Not correct. sin2alpha + cos2alpha = 1
true