2- what kind, how many, and which one
Explanation:
Coherence: The arrangement of ideas in such a way that the reader can easily follow from one point to the next.
Answer:
The main themes in "Alice in Wonderland" are: The loss of childhood innocence and life without real meaning.
Explanation:
The book tells the story of Alice, a curious girl who follows a White Rabbit in a vest and watch, plunging into her den without thinking. The protagonist is projected into a new world full of animals and anthropomorphic objects that speak and behave like human beings. In Wonderland, Alice transforms, lives adventures and is confronted with the absurd, the impossible, questioning everything she has learned so far. In Wonderland, Alice comes across a world that has no concrete meaning and ends up engaging in themes too adult for her age such as death, tyranny, condemnation, suffering, abuse and other things. For this reason, we can conclude that the main themes in this work are: the loss of childhood innocence and life without real meaning.
Scout is actually very grateful at this part of the story, but she wasn't the best neighbor. The children did not understand Boo very well and, because of it, they were harsh on him; often for no reason.
She is also grateful for being saved by boo when Ewell attacked them, but having given nothing to Boo is what bothers her.
Although you might say that the children gave Boo just the right amount of company and human interaction that he needed. Enough to keep his isolated lifestyle and enough for him to feel like he isn't the only human being in the world. When the kids were in danger, it was more than enough to drag Boo out of his reclusive way of living to help the kids, which also showed we all, and Boo himself, that he cared.
Directly speaking, though, even though subjectively Boo might have gained company or learned something from the kids, they didn't really give him anything actively.