Answer:
The Greasers?
Explanation:
I think the only "gang" in the outsiders is the greasers could be wrong though
<span>The answer is B - Words like "alarming" and "violence" give the excerpt a sinister tone.</span>
Answer:
Part A: Both works detail a scene of chaos and tragedy.
Part B: Th soldiers lined up between the Stste Housr and King Street, facing the townspeople.
Explanation:
Part A:
Both the passage and the image present a part in which the soldiers kill two members of the town . The passage describes the lining of the soldiers with their guns directed to the townsfolk, waiting for the command to fire (left side of the image) and the townsfolk in revolt and being shot without being armed (right side of the image). The scene is delirious and people's lives have been lost. This is the description in both works.
Part B:
The text describes the setting of the characters as two groups of people (i.e., the soldiers and the townsmen) facing each other. The image indicates this form of lining up clearly. The soldiers and the townsmen are grouped together and they face each other. The State House and the King Street are also presented.
No, Use tone, the viewpoint character’s attitude, in every scene to deepen the reader’s connections to the events of that scene and to the character. While the characters feelings is what is affected by the tone.
1/7 divided by 7
1/7 divided by 7/1
1/7 multiply by 1/7
= 1/49