Ping pong- A<span>n indoor game based on tennis, played with small paddles and a ball bounced on a table, divided by a net.
Juksei-I</span><span>s a 270-year-old folk sport, developed and played in South Africa and the forerunner of American Horseshoe Pitching.
Futsal-A</span><span> modified form of soccer played with five players, per side on a smaller typically indoor, field.
Janzi-</span><span> A traditional Chinese national sport, in which players aim to keep a heavily weighted </span>shuttlecock<span> in the air by using their bodies, apart from the hands, unlike in similar games </span>peteca<span> and </span>indiaca<span>.
Pesapello-</span><span> is a fast-moving </span>bat-and-ball sport<span> that is quite often referred to as the national sport of </span>Finland<span> and has some presence in other countries including </span>Germany<span>, </span>Sweden<span>, </span>Switzerland<span>, </span>Australia<span>, and Canada's </span>northern Ontario.<span>The game is similar to </span>brännboll<span>, </span>rounders<span>, and </span>lapta<span>, as well as </span>baseball<span>.</span>
The thesis statement is the one regarding the use of the story by O. Henry to show that poverty cannot affect true love becuase it expresses the gist of what O. Henry has wished to convey. While Jim sells his beautiful pocket watch in order to buy Della a brooch for her beautiful long hair, Della sells her hair so as to be able to afford a chain for Jim's pocket watch. Thus, their material gifts are rendered useless, but still each has proved to the other that they would rather give up their most prized possessions in order to please the other, and by doing so prove their mutual love. This discovery is the true gift that they both receive from the Magi on tht Christmas day.
Answer:
The story is narrated by “we,” the townspeople in general, who also play a role in Miss Emily's tragedy. The townspeople respect Miss Emily as a kind of living monument to their glorified but lost pre-Civil War Southern past, but are therefore also highly judgmental and gossipy about her, sometimes hypocritically.
Explanation: