In the excerpt, the main conflict is between the speaker and the person they are speaking to. What is the conflict in the rules of the Game?
The intended audience is all citizens of Westport County, as seen by the first sentence of the third paragraph.
This story is not a usual one. It talks about how our views and ideas can be judgmental and hurtful. It puts us (readers) in a point where we start thinking about our own perspectives.
Explanation:
This story has two main components as symbols - belief and honesty. The author wants to describe the entire scene in darkness. He excludes elements that give us 'hope' in our lives.
The woman who the narrator loved deceived him. She portrayed to be a faithful, honest and innocent woman who loved him deeply. This was an impression that everyone had about her including the narrator.
The story starts off with an exclamation of grief, where he yells 'I had loved her madly!'. From this part of the story, he continues to talk and express his love/emotion towards his lover. He continues to suffer in her loss, goes to places where he can relive moments, visits her grave and sits there for hours. He reads the messages on the tombstones where the story ends.
The entire course of story makes us understand that he understand how she deceived him from the beginning till the end.
Sorry but I don't know. I would help!
Yesterday, my friends went to the cite (replace with city) of a world-famous puppy park with their dogs. Theyre (Their) dogs' tails were wagging so quickly they looked like helicopters! It was adorable. Once they were their (there), the dogs got to run around and play while the people talked about there (their) favorite animals. Yesterday was a lot of fun for dog lovers.
Most of these errors are the wrong uses of "there" "they're" and "their". Their is possessive, there is pointing to where it is happening, and they're is "they are" describing what they are doing. When it is discussing multiple possessions, add a ' at the end. Found this helpful? Give it a Brainiest Award if so.