If direct characterization, as opposed to indirect characterization, straightforwardly describes or tells for the reader the personality and the traits of a character ("the woman was tall and shy; the man was small and was nervous"), then the sentence in the excerpt that contains it is this one: "Both were pretty, active, country girls who had no ambition to go on the stage." Other sentences in the excerpt are providing information about them (they were friends, they were young, they lived in a boarding house, they lived in a boarding house, and they were working), but they do not directly reveal their traits.
I believe the first is Chief Judge Brown and the second blank is A defendant who received a just ruling by Carswell!
I hope all is well and you pass! Good luck! (:
You could rewrite it a multitude of differing ways, but I’ll resort to not changing or adding a single word.
I have a dog, its name is Labrador. He is black in color. He wags his tail and licks my face when he is happy. I tell him, “Come, Labrador!” Sometimes he screams at me, “Gwaau!” He loves going for walks and chasing a red ball. I take him to school sometimes. Once he sees a black cat he wants to chase it, but I don’t let him. He is mad at me. I don’t know, but I hope he isn’t. I love my dog very much because he always obeys me and follows me everywhere.
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The word that best describes the
boy at the end of the passage is gloomy. The answer is letter D. From what the
boy thought, he described the house number seven as shabby and unentertaining
to live. He compared the house before and after years of service.