A central idea of the relationship between Ji-Suk and her mother in the story is:
C. Ji-Suk's mother shows her love for her daughter through her high expectations for her.
The detail from the story that best supports the answer in Part A is:
"Even though she'd made Ji-Suk take Korean lessons every Saturday morning followed by violin lessons in the afternoon - and cooked kimchi and other Korean delicacies with her at least once a week - Ji-Suk's mother had wanted her to succeed by American standards."
- In the short story "Bul-Go!-gi", Ji-Suk is caught between the cultural differences of America, the country where she lives, and Korea, where her mother is from.
- Ji-Suk's mother loves her, but she has a very rigid way of showing it. She wants her daughter to learn Korean and to succeed at what Korean people consider respectable activities.
- Ji-Suk <u>does not resent</u> her mother for having been so demanding. She respects her mother's culture and principles. However, she also respects <u>her own</u> principles, wishes, and culture.
- Ji-Suk shows her love for her son by doing the opposite of what her mother did. She does force him to do anything, but lets him choose for himself.
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Answer:
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Explanation:
Answer:
C. magnetic levitation train
Explanation:
The term/word Maglev has two defintion clues.
1 Within the word
it contains Mag- which means it has some relation with magnet. And, it contains -lev which means it has some relation with levitation.
2 Within the cotext (words surrounding a node or another word)
The words after Maglev are<em> "or magnetic levitation train" </em>which means Maglev is a magnetic levitation train.
Options A and B are incorrect because we find no such clues in the text.
Silko goes back to a moment in time before her birth to explain the reader the reason why she and her sisters have nothing in common to other girls in the town, in Laguna Pueblo. They were not white girls.
As an Indian girl, Silko explains how white people arrived to Laguna Pueblo and separated Indians offspring from his parents.
Silko is a character that appears in the story "<em>Yellow Woman and the Beauty of Spirit"</em>, written by Leslie Marmol.