Answer: Self-worth is something determined by someone's own mental health and restraint. Sometimes owning something does not define how you veiw yourself. For example if you owned a broken stuffed animal as a childhood toy, it wouldn't reflect your occupation as a billionare. It depends from people to people. Some want to by the things they deem worthy of themselves while others don't care. So no, your position is not concretely linked to what you own.
Explanation: Just my little answer. Everyone has their own. Have a nice day :)
This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Read The Landlady
, By Roald Dahl (1959)
What is abnormal about the boys in the guest-book?
A. Billy went to school with them.
B. They have uncommon names.
C. They are celebrities.
D. They sound familiar to Billy
Answer: D. They sound familiar to Billy
Explanation:
When Billy found the guest-book, and after signing it himself, he realized that the only two other names on that page, Christopher Mulholland and Gregory W. Temple, sounded extremely familiar to him.
He even expresses astonishment about the fact that they seem connected in his mind, and he´s sure he saw them in the newspapers.
Hello Excarledgnz, <span>The Three Musketeers are also referred to as </span><span>Richelieu's Guards</span>.