Two Kinds" focuses on the mother/daughter dynamic. Because Jing Mei's mother lived an extremely difficult life in China, she pressures Jing Mei to excel in America where it is much easier for a girl to be successful. The problem is that Jing Mei's mother defines success for her daughter as being exceptional at something. Thus, Jing Mei must take piano lessons in order to <span>become </span>a child protegee.
The title refers to Jing Mei's mother's statement that there are two kinds of daughters in the world--those who obey, and those who rebel. For Jing Mei, as an adult, she can see a little bit of both in herself and is mature enough now to see what her mother was trying to do <span>for </span>her.
A. I think I will stay home tonight
Good karma? what are the choices?
Answer:
stanza
Explanation:
The number of lines within a stanza can change depending on the type of poem and even the type of stanza the peta wants to make. Sonnets, for example, present 4 stanzas with different numbers of lines between them. Other types of poems have a free pattern of lines that depend on the choice of the author for that theme.
The stanzas are named by the number of lines it has, so we can classify them as: couplet (2 lines), tercet (3 lines), quatrain (4 lines), cinquain (5 lines), sestet (6 lines, sometimes it's called a sexain), septet (7 lines), octave (8 lines).