Answer:
Giles Core is characterized as
1. A foolish man- Indirect Characterization
2. A courageous man- Direct Characterization.
Explanation:
The Crucible tells the story of a man named Giles Corey who voluntarily offered a piece of information that would cause people to suspect his wife as a witch. He mentioned that when his wife read a book, he found it hard to pray but hen she stopped reading the book, he could then pray. This made people suspect his wife to be a witch. Through his actions, the author indirectly characerized him as a foolish man.
He tried to correct that impression when instead of giving the name of a man suspected to be wizard, he rather chose to die. The author through this description directly characterized him as a hero.
Answer: everyone dies cause the paw is cursed
Explanation:
Unkempt - neglected, messy, uncared for
Temperance - self control or self restraint in action, statement, or etc.
Deferential - Being respectful to opinions
Feints - Movements made in order to deceive an adversary; attacks aimed at one point for a distraction for the real place of attack
Protracted - drew out or lengthen, especially in time
Dourly - gloomily, sternly, sullen
Careens - things that are leaning away while in motion
Incarnate - personified as a quality or idea; embodied in flesh, given a bodily, especially human, form
Intractably - not being easily controlled, stubborn
Solicitude - Being anxious or concerned
hope this helps you :)
Answer:
The Grumble family found fault with everything and nothing, from the weather to the rains and the sun. And if there is nothing to grumble about, <em>"they'd growl that they'd nothing to grumble about."</em>
Explanation:
Lucy Maud Montgomery's poem "The Grumble Family" presents a neighborhood scene. In the poem, the speaker focuses on a particular family and their 'unsatisfactory' reaction to everything and how they are never contented with anything.
The Grumble family 'grumbles' about nothing and everything. Ranging from weather to complaining about nothing to grumble about, the family never seems to run out of issues to find fault with.
They grumble about <em>"the weather . . . the rain . . . the sun . . ."</em> That's not all, <em>"if everything pleased them . . . They'd growl that they'd nothing to grumble about!" </em>