Answer:
Bobo is, as his name suggests, somewhat dimwitted, but he is basically honest and appears to be a loyal friend. When he comes to Walter's apartment to deliver the bad news about the insurance money, he is so mannerly and polite to the women in the Younger household that he appears almost ridiculous.
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Answer:
I think it's D
Explanation:
I think it's D. ELA isn't my strongest point, but I think it's D.
A)The narrator feels that no one has ever experienced a love like theirs, even though they were children. He says that no one older or wiser has ever loved like they did.
D)He provides clear details about how she died. It shows that he understands her illness was natural.
these two are my top choices but i think it is D because it states he understands her illness was natural. A we are not sure if somone else love more then him/her
<span>As you may
know, situational irony is where the exact opposite of a hoped-for result is
the outcome. We can see this in the words that appear on
the pedestal: “Look on my works, ye
Mighty, and despair!” This is
situational irony because the works being spoken of are in shambles and would
be nothing of which to be proud or even despair at as they once probably
were/once intended to be. </span>
<span>Dimmesdale asks Pearl to kiss him. She does, and "a spell was broken ... her tears fell upon her father's cheek, they were the pledge that she would grow up amid human joy and sorrow, nor forever do battle with the world. Towards her mother, too, Pearl's errand as a messenger of anguish was all fulfilled."</span>