Answer:
23.03.2020
5464, Peter Street
Mumbai -65
Dear Praveen,
How are you? Hope your preparations for your exam are going in full swing. Things though have gone from bad at my end. Here I am not able to concentrate on my studies and facing a lot of issues pertaining to it.
Firstly there is a construction going on in my opposite parking lot and it is operational round the clock. The sound of the machines are a nuisance and facing a difficult task in coping with the situation.
Also here is a marriage function which creates a lot of noise because they are playing a songs in a loud speakers. Its disturb me a lot.
Eventhough I have to study by crossing all these obstacles.
Yours lovingly.
Rarti
Explanation:
The correct answer is <em><u>option D</u></em>. The assumption that the author may have about schools like Lowood is<u><em> that they are not good for young people.</em></u> Lowood School is where a young Jane is sent her aunt, Mrs Reed, who is not fond of her at all. The school will represent a dark place, where Jane will learn about the hardships of real life, like class hierarchy and gender roles of the English culture.
At Lowood, the girls are punished and cruelly treated by the Headmaster. Jane will learn by this experience, how poverty and being a woman is a sign of weakness and failure. Bronte uses Lowood School to represent the concept that not all schools are good for young people, if they will reinforce sexist and class stereotypes.
B. A period when humans learned farming and herding.
Neolithic means "new stone age" and was a time when people developed better tools for hunting and first learned to settle.
Hello. You did not enter the text or the play to which this question refers, which makes it impossible to answer. However, I will try to help you in the best possible way.
Macarthism was a historic period in the United States marked by a "witch hunt" system stimulated by the Red Scare that happened in 1950 and that was strongly associated with extreme fear of any communist element or threat that could be established in the country. Macarthism was established as a period marked by repression, political persecution, defamation, subversion and accusations without evidence, where people were accused and violently reprimanded for being associated with communism.
Although the play "The Crucible" was not mentioned in your question, we can associate it with this historical period, since like the Macarthism, the play presents a period of hysteria where people are unjustly accused and severely punished for something that provoked a deep fear in society, which was witchcraft. The difference is that Macarthismo promoted political persecution, while in "The Crucible", we are introduced to religious persecution.