Answer:The woman sat at the table drinking her <u>delightful </u>coffee!She looked oh so very <u>thoughtful</u>.The man sitting across from her told her that he was <u>Pondering </u>of taking the job in Wichita.She <u>gazed </u>at him .That was 2,000 miles away
Keywords
<u>Pondering</u> When you ponder something, you think about it seriously or consider it carefully.
<u>Gazed </u>look steadily and intently, especially in admiration, surprise, or thought
<u>delightful </u>causing delight; charming.
<u>Thoughtful</u> showing consideration for the needs of other people.
Answer:
This study used linkable administrative databases housed at the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy (MCHP). The original cohort consisted of 17,115 women born in Manitoba between April 1, 1979 and March 31, 1994, who stayed in the province until at least their 20th birthday, had at least one older sister, and had no missing values on key variables. Propensity score matching (1:2) was used to create balanced cohorts for two conditional logistic regression models; one examining the impact of an older sister’s teenage pregnancy and the other analyzing the effect of the mother’s teenage childbearing.
Explanation:
Answer:
It suggests that she did not care about his death.
Explanation:
Mrs. Wright, a character in the play <em>Trifles, </em>kills her husband because of her loneliness. The police and her neighbors come to her house to investigate. Mrs. Hale, when asked about how Mrs. Wright behaved, says that she laughed after killing her husband.
It would seem based on this that Mrs. Wright didn't feel anything bad about her husband's death. She experienced severe loneliness and depression in her small-town, rural life, that she didn't see another escape other than murdering her own husband. Even though the husband did not treat her badly, per se, she still felt the need to get rid of him and regain her freedom.