Answer:
do they have answer choices?
Answer:
Our town is a play about normal live in grover's corners that seems a little boring at first, the play centers at two people, George and Emily and is a analogy, the kids and daily life the townsfolk live is revealed in the first "act" of three, lead along by a "stage manager" who talks with the people. George marrys Emily and he used to be a picther, they show up at his wedding, after that the play gets symbolic with it skipping ahead to when Emily is dead, and the dead don't understand the living, Emily against advice goes back to the living, something she regrets as she sees how wasteful everyone is living. Like Mrs.Soames says "Wasn't life wonderful and awful." Honestly I didn't really understand the symbolism very well until I read the foreward.
Explanation:
Goodluck kid I tried to write it as neutral as possible, edit it a little to give it your voice, I didn't gramdstand or anything; hope you get a good grade.
Answer:
The Giver ends with Jonas’s rejection of his community’s ideal of Sameness. He decides to rescue Gabriel and escape the community, and they grow steadily weaker as they travel through an unfamiliar wintery landscape. At the top of a hill, Jonas finds a sled and rides it down toward a community with lit windows and music. Lowry does not confirm whether the two survive, because the reader can either interpret the sled as a hallucination of Jonas’s dying mind, or as a fortunate coincidence. Upon first seeing the top of the hill, Jonas believes that he remembers the place, and it is “a memory of his own,” as opposed to one from the Giver. Because Jonas doesn’t have his own memories of snow, the meaning of this sentence is not obvious. This confusion could signify Jonas’s deterioration. However, Jonas may also recognize that the hill and sled signify the presence of a community that allows for sleds and snow. Jonas calls his destination “Elsewhere,” an ambiguous term because the community uses it both to refer to places outside the community and the destination of people who have been “released,” or euthanized. Additionally, the reader cannot take the lights Jonas sees in the windows at face value. Light symbolizes hope, but people also often talk about seeing light right before death.
Explanation:
does that work or do u need more
I am pretty sure it’s D, since they were “merely asked”.