Answer:
“‘All this toughness, and bad grammar, and this Charles boy sounds like such a bad influence.’” ( Paragraph 21)
Explanation:
"Charles" is a short story penned by Shirley Jackson. The story is about Laurie, the protagonist of the story and his alter ego, whom he named Charles.
The story begins with Laurie's mother describing bad behavior of Laurie when he started going to Kindergarten. Soon, the story turned to the story of a boy named Charles, who created trouble in the Kindergarten. Laurie would narrate Charles story at the lunch time with so much of interest to his parents everyday.
<u>The author has scripted the story in such a manner that it draws similarities between the behavior of Laurie and Charles. (It was actually Laurie who was creating trouble in the class, as there was no one in the class named Charles. Laurie used to tell his own stories to his parents by naming himself as Charles.)</u>
The quote that supports this claim is in Paragraph 21, which says,
<em>"All this toughness, and bad grammar, and this Charles boy sounds like such a bad influence."</em>
Thus this quote is the correct one.
Answer:
One of the chief delights of The Cursed Child experience is Scorpius Malfoy, the son of Draco Malfoy and Astoria Greengrass. Scorpius is nothing like you might imagine a Malfoy offspring to be. He is terribly polite, incurably nerdy, and — more than anything — wants to have at least one true friend.
Explanation:
Answer:
There is within me (and with sadness I have watched it in others) a knot of cruelty borne by the stream of love, much as our blood sometimes bears the seed of our destruction, and at times I was mean to Doodle.
Explanation:
This was probably one of the saddest lines in the entire story. He is older when he says this thinking back on the memories of him and his brother.
Answer:
Appositive: the book by E.B. White
Noun or pronoun renamed: Charlotte's We
Explanation:
Appositive/appositive phrase is a noun/a noun phrase that remains another noun or a pronoun. There are two types of appositive phrases: restrictive (provides essential information about the noun it renames) and non-restrictive ( gives us more details about the renamed noun. Another important feature is that non-restrictive appositive phrases are always separated with commas from the rest of the sentence.
So, in this case, our appositive phrase is the book by E.B. White, and the noun it renames is Charlotte's Web. It is separated with commas and gives us more details about the renamed noun which makes it non-restrictive appositive phrase.