Answer:
B. She passes away after seeking forgiveness
C. She is burned when her dress catches on fire
Explanation:
Miss Havisham sends a note to Pip to meet her. Pip reaches Miss Havisham's house and the first thing she asks for is to forgive her for raising Estella ruthless and heartless. She asks him to sign below her name seeking forgiveness and he accepts it unconditionally. Finally, she pulls her chair too close to the fireplace and her worn out clothes catch fire and she runs shrieking, "with a whirl of fire blazing all about her" and soaring above her head. Pip tries to help her with his coat by enclosing her and uses the tablecloth to smoothen the flames. Finally, the physician declares that Miss Havisham is dead.
A: because the plot is very important to a cultural context
<span>"There is within me (and with sadness I have watched it in others) a knot of cruelty borne by the stream of love, much as our blood sometimes bears the seed of our destruction, and at times I was mean to Doodle." ☻</span>
Answer:
American females make direct eye contact while on the other hand, males don't.
Explanation:
Deborah Tannen is a University professor of Linguistics in Georgetown University. In her book "You Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation," Tannen writes about how men and women engage in a conversation. According to her research, men engages in "report-talk" whereas women in "rapport-talk."
Men while talking to each other do not make eye-contacts and would sit side by side while in conversation, whereas, women talk with making eye-contacts.