A participle is a <span>a word formed from a verb. So since a participle is a word formed from a verb the answer will have to be C. band.</span>
So like chapter 2 is all about Scout and the teacher Mrs. Caroline having troubles. Scout and Caroline get into a fight I’m pretty sure. Because scout can already read, gets caught writing a letter to Dill, and gets lectured by scout about how being helpful by giving money (to the cunningham poor person in class) actually isn’t helpful. (Does this make sense?) anyways they have a huge argument thanks to all of this.
Chapter 3 involves like scout realizing education “isnt for them”. Scout wants to quit school but Atticus agrees to continue reading with her in the evening in secret. Scout continues school. Chapter 3 also had a poor kid I think Walter going to eat lunch/dinner at the Atticus home with scout and (jeb? I think his name is) and scout gets called rude for pointing out Walter’s weird habit of putting molasses on his food. But that’s moderately it.
For the characters in Of Mice and Men, dreams are useful because they map out the possibilities of human happiness. Just as a map helps a traveler locate himself on the road, dreams help Lennie, George, and the others understand where they are and where they’re going. Many dreams in the work have a physical dimension: Not just wishes to be achieved, they are places to be reached. The fact that George’s ranch, the central dream of the book, is an actual place as opposed to a person or a thing underlines this geographical element. Dreams turn the characters’ otherwise meandering lives into journeys with a purpose, as they take pride in actions that support the achievement of their dreams and reject actions that do not. Having a destination gives the men’s lives meaning.
Dreams help the characters feel like more active participants in their own lives because they allow them to believe that the choices they make can have real, tangible benefits. They also help the characters cope with misery and hardship, keeping them from succumbing to the difficulties they face regularly.
The dream of the ranch offers George, Lennie, Candy, and the others a goal to work toward as well as the inspiration to keep struggling when things seem grim.
If I was ever a snow man, I would throw snowballs at people, but when they look to see who threw the snowball, they wouldn't be able to find anyone because I technically shouldn't be alive. I'd also chase people:)
Answer:
Poverty is a source of deviance. Poverty is characterized by the partial or total lack of economic resources necessary to satisfy the basic needs of a person, such as food, housing, health and education. This lack of resources necessarily implies a lack of these essential services for human development, with which the person as such grows and lives with a series of structural deficiencies that affect his life daily, generating a poor quality of life and a situation of permanent need.
For this reason, this need often generates a deviance in the correct behavior of people, because due to lack of education and opportunities, many poor people end up resorting to crime as a way to earn a living. In addition, in situations these people also engage in illegal or unhealthy activities such as drug or alcohol consumption, with the aim of abstracting from those kinds of negative situations that occur in their lives.