As the men argue, Atticus realizes that Boo Radley killed Ewell<span>, and it is Boo who Tate is trying to protect. They finally agree that </span>Ewell<span> did fall on his own knife, a decision Scout fully understands. Boo sees Jem one more time and then asks Scout to take him home.</span>
Answer:
Hurston comments on the wasted beauty of youth and the cruelty of aging through her portrayal of the main character.
Explanation:
The only comparison being made in this excerpt is the difference between Matty Redding's eyes when she was young and her eyes now. Hurston says that they "might have been beautiful" but now they are "watery and weak". This description shows the wasted beauty of youth and the cruelty of aging since the change of Matty Redding's eyes shows that they are less beautiful than they once could have been. There is nothing in the passage to suggest Hurston is exploring women's roles in the home or community, nor is it comparing women to men.
Answer:
This question is incomplete and I could not find online the song to which your question refers, but anyway I will give you an explanation about the conditionals that will help you to understand this.
Explanation:
Conditionals are used to speculate about what might happen, what might have happened, and what we would like to see happen.
Most sentences that use the conditional tense contain the term "if".
There are four main ways to construct conditional sentences. In all cases, they consist of an "if" statement or clause and a main statement.
Next I will write the types of conditionals that exist, their use and the structure they carry:
- Conditional Zero: General Facts
if + simple present, simple present
- First Conditional: A possible condition and its probable outcome
If + Simple present, simple future
- Second Conditional: A hypothetical condition and its probable outcome
If + Simple past, Present conditional or Present continuous conditional
- Third Conditional: A non-real condition from the past and its probable outcome in the past
If + past perfect, Perfect conditional