Answer:
We take the imprint others have left on us and overlay them on the people that follow. If I knew someone aggressive and they hurt me, I would therefore be wary of any other aggressive persons I come across on the chance they may hurt me as well. If I met someone kind and they said they were kind because of their religion, I would naturally be inclined to think most others of the given religion are also as kind.
Answer:
These questions are all about you! I can't answer them, it wouldn't be right!
If you could visit any place in the world, then where would you go?
It would be really bad if- If what happend? What's the something that is bad could happen
My home town would be more interesting if?
And ask yourself all the other questions!
<h2>
Have a nice life and Good Luck! </h2>
The answer is returning to her husband
George Bergeron's character is, literally, extremely intelligent, strong, and capable. We know this because of the number of handicaps he is forced to wear by the government. His weights, for example, are so tiring that his wife suggests he risk removing them even thought the consequences are severe for doing so.
Because of his handicaps, George is a character who is incapable of changing, reacting to a situation, or even remembering what he his doing and he is such a rule-follower that he won't use his intelligence or strength to go against the government.
A reader can see that the handicaps put on George are a metaphor for the burdens that the majority of the population of America are encumbered by in real life. While most people don't have pounds of bird-shot strapped to their necks, it is clear that people ARE burdened by great amounts of debt, jobs that pay little, stresses like large families, consumerism, etc that hold them back from participating fully in life. The "handicaps'' of the story are literally meant to show how much weight we are putting on the wrong things in our lives.
Vonnegut uses characters like George to demonstrate how little people are actually living. They are flat, unfeeling, unemotional, and unable to communicate, resist, or change. It is obvious that George SHOULD react to seeing his son's violent death broadcast on national television, but he is completely incapable of doing so because of the handicaps attached to him. The lack of character development, coupled with the excellent description of George's strengths due to his handicaps is what allows a reader to understand that the character is meant to be criticized. Readers are meant to ask themselves, how could he not react? How could he not remember? Why won't he question the ideals of the government? Why won't he risk himself for something that could save his son?
Anticipation is an eagerness to find out what’s going to happen next. When you anticipate something, you predict events. The way things turn out affect how you feel about the story, but the anticipation part is nothing to do with what actually ends up happening.<span>
The question is:
</span><span>Which two parts of this excerpt from F. Scott Fitzgerald's "Winter Dreams" helps build anticipation in the story?
</span>
The most appropriate choices are:
2) <span>because the sound of a piano over a stretch of water had always seemed beautiful to Dexter he lay perfectly quiet and listened.
</span>and
5) I<span>t was a mood of intense appreciation, a sense that, for once, he was magnificently attune to life and that everything about him was radiating a brightness and a glamour he might never know again.</span>