George Bergeron accepts his handicapping devices as part of his existence. He endures the "little mental handicap radio" in his ear, and the transmissions it sends to "keep people...from taking unfair advantage of their brains" as the price he must pay to live in a society in which "everybody was finally equal...every which way."
George actively resists Hazel's suggestion that he lighten the weight of the handicapping bag locked around his neck. Hazel contends that George could remove a few of the birdshot balls without any penalty, since he would not be in danger of being discovered if he reduced the burden slightly while he was at home. George has no interest in attempting such an adjustment to his officially-assigned handicap; in fact, he convincingly argues the importance of all persons following the laws and penalities in order to preserve the system for all citizens asking, "'The minute people start cheating on laws, what do you think happens to society?'...'Reckon it'd fall all apart,' said Hazel."
Drive it around to different places
Answer: Numbers 2,3,4,5, and 6 in order
Explanation:
2: He rarely goes to football games
3: We eat a lot on every Thanksgiving Day
4: I visit my grandparents every holiday
5: That store is always crowded
6: We wear traditional clothes once in a while
Remember to always capitalize the first letters of any sentence that you write/type.
If you were to change the order of these words in any of the sentences for the sake of discussion, it wouldn't make sense right? Usually if you were to answer this, maybe try to rearrange the words until it sounds correct. If your still stuck, maybe ask a parent/guardian/sibling/teacher/etc.
Answer:
Identity vs role confusion
Explanation:
This is a moment when an adolescent struggles to define who she/is
Answer:
our short-term memories do better with smaller bits of information