Answer:
To make transitions from one to another narration section in the essay, Diaz uses the rhetorical questions located in paragraph 3, 8 and 10.
Answer:The excerpt supports the conclusion that Pau Amma the crab thinks he is better than other animals.
Explanation:
In the excerpt, as in the rest of the story, the character of Pau Amma the crab is depicted as an animal that does not want to follow neither what the rest of the animals are doing or what the man orders him to do. When all the animals are playing the game the magician told them to play, Pau Amma gets impatient and decides to get into the sea by himself, and to separate from the group. This is used to show how the crab thinks he is better than the rest, more important and in power control of the situation.
From User - Poncetmarina02
When a human is asked about a particular fire,
she comes close:
then it is too hot,
so she turns her face—
and that’s when the forest of her bearable life appears,
always on the other side of the fire. The fire
she’s been asked to tell the story of,
she has to turn from it, so the story you hear
is that of pines and twitching leaves
and how her body is like neither—
all the while there is a fire
at her back
which she feels in fine detail,
as if the flame were a dremel
and her back its etching glass.
You will not know all about the fire
simply because you asked.
When she speaks of the forest
this is what she is teaching you,
you who thought you were her master.
Romeo and Juliet is a popular one