Answer:
Bailey notices in Chapter 10 that the children of the neighborhood don't play with Todd. Ethan doesn't go to his house. When he comes around Bailey and Marshmallow feel his presence with fear. Bailey likes summer when they go to the Farm. He learns all the smells and sounds on the way to the town. One day when they are in the town, Bailey sees a dog catching a plastic disk. When they get home Ethan goes to his room to start making "the flip," a cross between a frisbee, When Ethan throws it Bailey can't catch it and Ethan becomes discouraged.
Answer:
4. or 2.
Explanation:
My teacher explanied it to us like this! :D
When none of the characters are true, but the setting may be true, and what happens in the story actually happened in real life (at least some- most of it)
hope this helps
Answer:
Langston Hughes, a poet who writes his poem expressing life, two poems he wrote “Dream `Deferred” and “Dreams” are similar and different in a way. “A Dream Deferred” where talks about what happen to dreams when they are put on hold. “Dreams” explores the idea that without dreams, life is without meaning.
"Fortunato" is an Italian derivation of the Roman proper name "Fortunatus." It refers to a Latin adjective which means "blest" or "fortunate." It is known popularly referenced in the Bible in 1 Corinthians 16:17, in which Fortunatus is one of the Seventy Disciples and serves as an ambassador to the Corinthian church. St. Paul writes in this verse:
I was glad when Stephanas, Fortunatus, and Achaicus arrived, because they have supplied what was lacking from you.
"Fortunatus," thus, went on to become relatively popular in the Catholic tradition, with many saints, martyrs, and clergymen taking up the name. This--as the other educators have pointed out--is deeply ironic given Fortunato's indulgent behavior throughout the story. Fortunato does not appear to possess the graces and qualities of a man of faith; rather, he seems to gratify his every whim and desire, no matter how base or low--drinking, gossiping, cavorting, and partying his way through life. The way in which he dies--being paved behind a wall while drunk--is hardly beatific or holy. He does not perish as a martyr, but rather as a fool.