No she wasn’t aware and she did what she could
Answer:
E. All of the above
Explanation:
According to a different source, these are the options that come with this question:
A. Jim’s mother lacks religious faith, whereas the school book mothers are pious.
B. She is neither loving nor devoted to her son, whereas the school book mothers are.
C. She is healthy, whereas the school book mothers are always dying of consumption.
D. She physically hits him, whereas the school book mothers are gentle and affectionate.
E. All of the above
This question refers to the story "The Story of the Bad Little Boy" by Mark Twain. In this story, Twain talks about a boy who was very bad, but who never felt guilty, received a punishment or was particularly unhappy. According to Twain, this shows that the moral stories that we find in "Sunday-school books" do not reflect reality.
One of the elements in the boy's life (Jim) that did not resemble those stories was his mother. Jim's mother was not a sick and pious woman like those often found in such stories. Instead, she was tough, healthy and "stout." Moreover, she was not religious, and she did not worry about Jim in any way. Instead, she cared little for him and physically hit him, spanking him and boxing his ears.
Answer:
1. The point that the writer wishes
2. Pieces of factual details that back up the main idea of a specific content
Answer:
Because it maintains the religious concepts of Judaism and encourages people not to lose faith in God.
Explanation:
This question is about the book "Night" where the narrator tells how his life was in the Nazi concentration camp, as a Jew, suffering the most diverse and inhuman abuse that can be imagined. In that same concentration camp there is a rabbi named Eliahou, who maintains religious concepts, urging everyone not to lose faith in God. The narrator does not know how the rabbi did not provoke anyone's anger because it was not possible to see God in a situation like the one they were going through, but people were comforted by the rabbi's words.
Grendel wages war, that is terrorizes Heorot and its inhabitants, because he is a carnivorous, devilish creature that is committed to disturbing the king's peace and prosperity of the realm. The Dragon, on the other hand, wages war simply because a slave stole a cup from the treasure he had guarded for ages. So, his motivation is retribution. Grendel is a subverted human, the descendant of Cain, so he challenges the king and his subjects. The Dragon is something less particular, a kind of irrational force that subverts the order itself. He strikes Beowulf's kingdom. The clash of the two of them will end with both being dead, and the conflict unresolved.