1) The glass menagerie in the play mostly represents Laura, because she lives in an imaginary world and her glass animals keeps her active.
2) Tom is confined to the horrors of his life in the family and Laura has a private world that she claims not to share in reality and Amanda, a pampered woman with unrealistic dreams. These conflicts eventually affect the lives of each characters in concluding that the cannot accept the reality that has been given to them. They purposely dodge their problem into a solution that seems to have created another problem.
Answer:
what about the other part of the question that shows you options to pick from?
Answer:
C. Experts disagree about whether online writing has helped or hurt students' writing skills overall
Explanation:
Option C is the best option that synthesizes information from both sources.
This is true because in Source 1, we see that Nakamura actually pointed out that the internet has affected the writing skills of students. But in Source 2, Linda Idris tends to disagree with that. Idris tend to point out the positive impact that online writing has made in students.
We then discover that there tends to be a disagreement from both sources about whether truly online writing has helped or hurt students' writing skills overall.
I think it is <span>C. dollhouse</span>
Answer:
1. Stationery (for the 1st sentence)
Stationary (for the second one)
2. than (<em>for</em><em> </em><em>the</em><em> </em><em>1st</em><em> </em><em>sentence</em><em>)</em><em> </em>
then <em>(</em><em>2nd</em><em> </em><em>sentence</em><em>)</em>
3. led (1st sentence)
lead (2nd sentence)
4. breath <em>(</em><em>1st</em><em> </em><em>sentence</em><em>)</em><em> </em>
breathe (2nd sentence)
5. already (1st sentence)
all ready (2nd <em>sentence</em><em>)</em>
6. all together (<em>1st</em><em> </em><em>sentence</em><em>)</em>
altogether (<em>2nd</em><em> </em><em>sentence</em><em>)</em>
7. aloud (1st sentence)
allowed (<em>2nd</em><em> </em><em>sentence</em><em>)</em>
8. who's (1st sentence)
whose (2nd sentence)
9. lay (<em>1st</em><em> </em><em>sentence</em><em>)</em>
lie (2nd sentence)
Explanation:
And ur done