I think it is either A or B... I'm not sure between the two, but at least I narrowed it down to those options. Hope this helps you a bit :)
The unlikely story he told proved to be a cunning ploy at deception.
Harper Lee's 'To Kill a Mocking Bird' is a first person narration of Jean'Scout' Louise Finch, where we read the story of Scout and her family. As the protagonist of this story, Scout, starts this story by telling readers about how her brother broke his arm.
Explanation:
Scout was the most loved and commonly addressed nickname of Jean Louise Finch. She was rarely addressed with her real name by any of her family members and people who knew her.
She talks about certain situations where her elder brother Jem broke his arm few years back. She eventually starts telling readers about the history of her family when one of her ancestors fled from England to Alabama where he lived on a farm, named it as Finch Landing. This farm was a primary resource for their family for many years after that, for few generations.
She talks about her father, Atticus, who chose to be a Lawyer and was the first one in the Finch family to not base his primary resource as the farm. He moved to Maycomb to become a Lawyer.
Her father has a brother, Jack, who was a Medicine practitioner in Boston. She also has an aunt, her father's sister Alexandra, who continues to take care of Finch Landing.
She then talks about her mother, who passed away when Jean was two years old. Her memories are very vague in Scout's brain but her elder brother, Jem missed their mother early.
So while I first started flying it was,amazing it was like I could fly above all of the worlds problems and just BE Free.
Thanks for posting. I hadn't thought of it before.
The quick answer to this is that they gather leaves to make boats. As a science major, I'm a little doubtful this would work. Those ants covered acres and acres and their size though relatively small, were huge compared to other ants. The surface tension of water with a leaf might be enough to accommodate 20 ants, but that was a spit in the bucket.
Further, this implies that the ants were discriminating enough to stop eating the vegetation (which is the central conflict of the story) and decide that they had to forestall their appetite so they had leaves to cross. Even if they were capable of such higher lever mental abilities, there likely were not enough leaves around to accomplish the crossing.
All of that just so I could answer A