Answer:
B) It is located on a wide, isolated expanse of farmland.
Explanation:
A) It is located on a farm with many field hands and employees.
B) It is located on a wide, isolated expanse of farmland.
C) It is in a small town where everyone is friendly toward one another.
D) It is in a deserted town in which mysterious events occur.
She needs company in this wide field because she feels alone.
Well first of all, there are no other traveling workers. Instead it was something very uncommon back then just because there are so much competition due to the Great Depression. Second, George is the one that does all the talking and dominates things when they are together. So some people like the boss thinks George is taking advantage of Lennie and some others such as Curley thinks they are gay.
Answer:
I would say yes because If we have plastic in the oceon,cutting down trees, killing animals. Then Future genarations won't be able to see the tigers elephants and the other animals that we have now. In order for humans to change is if we stop using plastic or just reuses clothes, plastic,shoes,paper.
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
On March 4th, when Charlie took the Rorschach Test, he was supposed to view the images of the inkblots and freely imagine what he saw in them. But Charlie only saw the inkblots for what they were: blobs of ink. Even when Burt tells him to imagine, to pretend, to look for something there in the card, Charlie can't. He struggles to give a true description of the cards, pointing out how one was "a very nice pictur of ink with pritty points all around the eges," but again, this isn't the response that the psychologist is looking for.
Like ambiguously shaped clouds in which people "see" images of people and animals, the inkblots have enough random, busy shapes on them for people to interpret them as many different things--people, animals, scenes, conflicts, and so on. The idea is that the psychologist will pay attention to what a person thinks he or she sees in the inkblots, which is supposed to provide insight on what that person thinks and feels overall.
As a result of Charlie's inability to properly take this test, he worries that he's failed and that he won't be a candidate for the treatment to increase his intelligence. And while he gets frustrated with himself during the test, and while Burt seems to get almost angry--as evinced when his pencil point breaks--I wouldn't say that Charlie is angry in this situation.
But what this scene does reveal about his character is that perhaps he's already smarter than we expect. By insisting on seeing the inkblots for what they really are, and by failing to imagine scenes and images that are false or skewed, Charlie shows that he's not just honest but scrupulous. This early evidence of his good character foreshadows the upcoming conflicts he has with the men at the bakery as well as the researchers themselves, who are less scrupulous.