Uchida includes the anecdote about the neighbors' sleeping son to provide a bit of amusement in an otherwise serious account.
<h3>Why does Uchida feel that calling it a condo was ludicrous?</h3>
Uchida's experience that calling it an "apartment" become "ludicrous". it is 10x20 toes, the darkish, cold, empty, the floor is dirty, and it smells of horses. The phrase "rental" suggests a home for human beings, no longer horses.
Desert Exile is a fantastically written private record. Uchida's purpose changed into to light up the Issei and Nisei internment revel on a private level for the advantage of later generations.
Learn more about Uchida here brainly.com/question/1385466
#SPJ10
The tone of this excerpt from Maureen Daly's famous story "Sixteen" is primarily intimate, but also frank, sentimental, chatty, colloquial, and a little bit impassioned. The narrator is describing, informally and enthusiastically, a casual, but seemingly very cherished, encounter with a boy, and she appears to be very comfortable sharing her intimate feelings with her interlocutor, judging by some of her expressions - "don't be silly, I told you before, I get around," "Don't you see? This was different," or "It was all so lovely."
Seeing someone yawn, or even the thought of it, can make you yawn too.
Jean might see that people in China look different and there is different cultural exercises. I think it would be the same if someone were to go from France to China, but there is more diversity among the world, so we could see people from China, Asia, Africa, Mexico and more. So its more common.
And they might call Jean a foreign devil because they are going to another country and leaving their own country.
His point of view is thinking of Jean as a traitor for leaving his country, but Jean might just be trying to learn form others and explore.
Hope this helps!!