Answer:
It is effective, because such phrases as "Who in the world are you," "you could just have knocked me down with a feather," and "went out to Californy" show Miss Cynthia's emotions and the way she really talks.
Explanation:
According to this excerpt from "The Softening of Miss Cynthia" by Lucy Maud Montgomery, there is a dialogue between two people about someone's death and reuniting with his aunt.
The statement that best describes the dialogue in this excerpt is option C
Answer:
out like a light like a light
Explanation:
They ruled unanimously that there is a meaningful distinction between punishing the content of speech and using speech as evidence of motive in a crime. (Unanimously- agreed to by all)
The village lottery culminates in a violent murder each year, a bizarre ritual that suggests how dangerous tradition can be when people follow it blindly. Before we know what kind of lottery they’re conducting, the villagers and their preparations seem harmless, even quaint: they’ve appointed a rather pathetic man to lead the lottery, and children run about gathering stones in the town square. Everyone is seems preoccupied with a funny-looking black box, and the lottery consists of little more than handmade slips of paper. Tradition is endemic to small towns, a way to link families and generations. Jackson, however, pokes holes in the reverence that people have for tradition. She writes that the villagers don’t really know much about the lottery’s origin but try to preserve the tradition nevertheless.