<span> the word “pointing” mean in this stage direction is sharping end .</span>
<span>The following sentence containing a collective noun
is letter B: Listen, my children,
and you shall hear. Common nouns are nouns that are in a group. </span><span>Nouns are names of a person,
animal, place, event, etc. It could be proper or common noun. Common nouns are
names of general items and you find them everywhere you go. These words are not
usually capitalized, except if it is the starting word in a sentence. Proper
nouns on the other hand are more specific names and they are capitalized. </span>
Answer: From the outset we know that this is a child speaking to the father about the smell of alcohol (whiskey, your breath). If life is a dance then this child is having a tough time because the dance was not easy - note the lack of a contraction which makes the line more formal.
Romped implies a sense of fun but lacking control because things fall from the shelf as a result of the dance and mother isn't well pleased. The use of the word countenance and unfrown is unusual. The former refers to the mother's facial expression, the latter isn't a proper word.
The words battered and scraped, beat and hard suggest the father's rough handling of the boy but these are neutralised almost by the use of waltzed, which implies some sort of carefree innocence.
Don't know if this helps, but hopefully you gained something from this!