Read the following excerpt from "The White Umbrella.
Lots of people's mothers work "
Those are...
Read the following excerpt from "The White Umbrella.
Lots of people's mothers work "
Those are American people," | said.
"So what do you think we are? I can do the pledge of allegiance with my eyes closed." Nevertheless, she tried to be discreet and if my mother wasn't home by 5:30 we would start cooking by ourselves."
What does the quote reveal about the narrator?
A. The narrator doesn't like to cook
B. The narrator doesn't consider herself to be like other Americans
C. The narrator wishes her mother taught piano lessons
D. The narrator questions her mother's ability to say the pledge of allegiance.​
Answers: 1
English, 21.06.2019 13:00
Hurry me ples u type the correct word from the word bank to complete the sentence. his majesty king bhumibol adulyadej of thailand is the world's longest-reigning living having ascended to the throne in 1946. word bank: anterior annihilated bisected comply copious duplicate duplex magnanimous megalomania microbe omnivorous omnipotent monarch renegade vanguard vanity
Answers: 3
English, 21.06.2019 23:30
The difference between point of view and choice of person in a story is that "person" is the literary name given to main characters in a story, and "point of view" is the perspective from which we view the story "person" is part of a term used to describe the type of narrator (as in first-person or third-person); "point of view" is how the antagonist understands the events of a story the terms are interchangeable; there is really no difference between them "point of view" refers to the perspective from which the story is told; "person" is part of a term used to describe a type of narrator (as in first-person or third-person)
Answers: 2
English, 22.06.2019 16:30
How does wiesel clearly try to persuade the audience in this passage ?
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 17:30
Determine the rhyme scheme of the following poem by elizabeth barrett browning. xxiii is it indeed so? if i lay here dead, wouldst thou miss any life in losing mine? and would the sun for thee more coldly shine because of grave-damps falling round my head? i marvelled, my beloved, when i read thy thought so in the letter. i am thine— but . . so much to thee? can i pour thy wine while my hands tremble? then my soul, instead of dreams of death, resumes life's lower range. then, love me, love! look on me—breathe on me! as brighter ladies do not count it strange, for love, to give up acres and degree, i yield the grave for thy sake, and exchange my near sweet view of heaven, for earth with thee!
Answers: 3
English, 14.04.2020 19:02
Mathematics, 14.04.2020 19:02
Mathematics, 14.04.2020 19:02
Mathematics, 14.04.2020 19:03
English, 14.04.2020 19:03