Answer:
d. Anxious.
Explanation:
The novel "Walk Two Moons" by Sharon Creech revolves around the life of Sal, our protagonist as she undergoes a change in her life after the death of her mother. The book covers the whole narrative of her journey with her grandparents' trip to visit their mother's final resting place and also her new life in Ohio and her new friendship with Phoebe Winterbottom.
Mrs. Winterbottom is the mother of Sal's new and future best friend Phoebe. Like her own mother, Sal observes that Mrs. Winterbottom also is a dedicated housewife who is stuck within the house, meek and obedient. But at the same time, she realizes that she (Mrs. Winterbottom) desires a life that is not merely baking, cooking, and cleaning. She is constantly anxious about how she is, trying hard to please everyone but at the same time, tired and fed up with the normal, boring life she is living. She finally decided to leave her family, disappearing to discover her true self. In her attempt to reconcile her true self and her past, she leaves everything behind, returning with the revelation of her past life- that she'd had a son.
Thus, the correct answer is anxious.
Answer:
Ryder is the person who stole the blue carbuncle.
“’Precisely so—the head attendant at the Hotel Cosmopolitan.’”
Explanation:
Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes Series "The Adventures of the Blue Carbuncle" revolves around the stolen jewel of the Countess of Morcar’s blue carbuncle. The story would lead Holmes and Watson through the history of a goose's origin and death to help identify the real thief.
In the given passage from the story, we can see that Holmes knows exactly what he was doing. And when the <em>"little rat-faced fellow"</em> hears from Holmes the history of how 'his' goose was passed on from Mrs. Oakshott to the Inn, he knows he must get every detail about it. Up till this part in the story, everyone who had laid hands on the goose has no idea about the diamond, so, the hasty and eager behavior of the <em>"little fellow"</em> makes Holmes realize that he is the only one to know the true importance of the goose. This shows that James Ryder, aka John Robinson, is the person who stole the diamond.
The conclusion that Ryder is the thief is supported by the line <em>"Precisely so—the head attendant at the Hotel Cosmopolitan"</em>. This is because it was at the Hotel Cosmopolitan that the robbery took place and also Ryder was the only witness to have seen and reported the missing diamond.
marry Paris creo que es, no se
A it is a bc i have had this question before and i got it right