In the passage from "A Doll's House", Nora is B) Glad that she finally has money to spend on gifts for the holidays.
After arriving, Nora is very eager to show her husband what she has bought for Christmas. Even though Helmer does not agree with such spending of money, she insists on him not to worry so much since he will earn a lot more money the next year. She excuses herself by explaining him that it is the first Christmas they did not need to economize. So, she is persuading him to relax about it.
<span>Simile
Idiom
And Irony is some of the figurative language in Number the Stars </span>
Okay, did you have a conversation with one of the higher people in your school? If you're uncomfortable report it to the office.
Shakespear used many illusions, as showing them in skits or plays. They were usually about mythology and religion.