In Chapter 3, Atticus explains to Scout that "the Ewells had been the disgrace of Maycomb for three generations" and that "none of them had done an honest day's work in his recollection." Atticus promises to take Scout to see the Ewell house one day to show her that "they lived like animals."
mark brainliest please it would help alot
:)
The rhetorical device used by Twain in this excerpt is the anecdote (C.).
<u>An anecdote is defined as an entertaining narrative, usually relating biographical events</u>.
This definition fits to the text because the story is an account of events which happened to the character in the past ("One winter's night, two years ago, I...") and the narrative is comical enough to be considered for entertainement value ("I was carrying off a box of guns ... and he had got my corpse!").
I think change isn’t to is
If the passage you're talking about is this:
<span>"So the Helming woman went on her rounds,
queenly and dignified, decked out in rings,
offering the goblet to all ranks,
treating the household and the assembled troop
until it was Beowulf’s turn to take it from her hand."
Then the correct answer is C. a gift-giving.
Before going into a fight, the warriors honour each other with gifts. This was a common Anglo-Saxon ritual of great significance. It meant that the people who are honouring each other are a community in which they treat each other with respect, fight side by side, and pledge to keep each other safe in the battles to come.</span>