Mr. Raymond thinks this, because Scout and Dill have not yet been alive long enough to become corrupted and hateful. The adults in Maycomb have built up years of gossip and prejudices, but Raymond sees young children such as Scout and Dill as a type of clean slate, who can still be educated about the way others live, and can understand things differently than the others in town.
The word “visible” is the word that sticks out here. Notice how all the other words include “divi” in them.
Hope this helps!
Noun - quiz
adverb - loudly
preposition - when
conjunction - that
Answer:
In my opinion, yes. Symbolism can be anything. In writing, it's usually an idea, or thing, or words that represent something beyond the literal meaning. Even a picture or symbol can represent something. Is that helpful?
Answer:
I think its "So boy, don't turn back./Don't you set down on the steps/ 'Cause you finds it's kinder hard./ Don't you fall now-/ For I'se still goin', honey" (Lines 14-18)", because the rest of the lines seem to be the speaker telling her son about her experience in life. These lines however, are more directed at her son as a bit of warning/advice.
hope this helps! :)