Answer: Mrs. Mitty breaks into her husband's fantasy as he is imagining himself the commander of "a huge, hurtling eight-engined Navy hydroplane" fighting its way through a storm approaching hurricane velocity.
Explanation:
Not so fast! You’re driving too fast!” said Mrs. Mitty. “What are you driving so fast for?”
Very quickly James Thurber informs us that Mitty lives in a fantasy world at least partly to escape from his domineering wife who has the annoying habit of repeating everything she says.
Well, generally you should list the answers to choose from, but the Constitutional Amendment gives citizens the right to practice religion, have freedom of speech and the press, to peacefully gather (assemble) and petition against the government, or protest.
The author Anita Desai had a lot of changes in pace during Games at twilight. Some of the changes of pacing are:
1. The kids are about to play hide and seek and they are excited and the pace of the story is fast. But as soon as Ravi hides the pace is slow and the story tends to get contemplative and it slowly connects to the thoughts and Ravi's memories.
2. One of the changes in pace that is most exciting is when Ravi finaly decides to finish the game by going to the post and say Den!. By the time he says that, the other kids cannot recognize him. A lot of time has passed and now the kids don't even recognize him. It is such an exciting change of pace and time.
The reader may interpret the story in different ways due to the fact that the perspective of Ravi is in a different pace of the other kids perspective.
Some of the examples of this change of pace are:
- <span>It took them a minute to grasp what he was saying, even who he was.
</span>- Ravi had never cared to enter such a dark and depressing mortuary of defunct household goods seething with such unspeakable and alarming animal life but, <span> Ravi suddenly slipped off the flowerpot and through the crack and was gone.
</span>- <span>for minutes, hours, his legs began to tremble with the effort, the inaction. By now he could see enough in the dark to make out the large solid shapes of old wardrobes, broken buckets, and bedsteads piled on top of each other around him. He recognized an old bathtub
</span>- <span>It grew darker in the shed as the light at the door grew softer, fuzzier, turned to a kind of crumbling yellow pollen that turned to yellow fur, blue fur, gray fur. Evening. Twilight.
</span>- <span>It took them a minute to grasp what he was saying, even who he was. They had quite forgotten him.</span>
Answer:
No because for as I have been alive, when I think of America, I think of our original anthem. At a school event, or a sports game, we play that anthem to honor our country. To change the anthem would to be like changing the flag. It is changing who we are and what our country stands for.
Explanation:
Can you give brainliest? jkjk....
unless? :>