Answer:
Depending on the passage, it means to find fault with someone, or to scold.
I would think the answer is C standard English because gotten is use to say something like Look what you gotten yourself into or Why did you gotten me into this to.
Grant offers to bring Jefferson a little notebook so that he can write down any thoughts that come to his mind, and Jefferson agrees to the plan.
Answer:
1. “A”
2. “C”
3. “C”
4. “A”or”B”
5. “A”
Explanation: This is just what I think :)
In Chapter Eight, we come to see that though we might be tempted to hold Victor responsible for the verdict (Justine's trial), this is an overly simplistic view of events. Frankenstein's decision to conceal the truth is terribly misguided; Shelley, however, gives us no indication that he does this in order to absolve himself of guilt. "Fangs of remorse" tear at him, and, in his own heart at least, he bears the guilt for both William's murder and Justine's execution. He can share his terrible secret with no one, and is thus utterly isolated, an outcast from human society.