Answer: AnswerAnswerAnswerAnswer
Explanation:
If I’m not wrong, I am quite sure that the question is a personal question for you to answer. Describe what you plan to do about what happened AND what is your name in this situation/time/era?
1. He waft along the bridge.
2. The cat waver itself from the pine.
3. The flower weathered itself from the changing seasons.
4. Mary who is a zeal, partied all night.
5. Richard abet John to steal some money at the store.
Answer:
She recognizes the connection between objects and words.
Explanation:
Helen Keller had already begun forming letters with her fingers, so water was not the first word she wrote.
Helen had broken the doll way before she went to the well. In fact, she forgets the frustration she felt before after she touches the doll and she says she regretted the doll after.
The honeysuckle thing is irrelevant to this question.
Helen could not understand the connection between words and objects because mug and water were essentially the same thing to her. Once she was away from the vessels, the jugs, mugs and saucers, and felt the water in the well gush in between her fingers, Helen understood "water" but more importantly, she understood words.
I wasn't able to find this question online to see if it is supposed to be a multiple-choice question or an open-ended one. Therefore, I will provide you with my own analysis and interpretation of the paragraph.
Answer and Explanation:
In this particular excerpt from Virginia Woolf's “In Search of a Room of One’s Own,” the author shows how dangerous it was for a woman to be intelligent and talented in the sixteenth century. Society feared and mocked gifted women. Mocked in the sense that they would try to convince her it was shameful, disgraceful to have her own thoughts expressed, to express her own feelings, to defy the status quo. Feared in the sense that society knew very well how powerful women could be once they began to express themselves, once they realized they too could write and produce ideas in a powerful manner. Women were "half witch, half wizard," inspiring respect and repulsion at the same time. That treatment by society would be enough to drive any woman - anyone, as a matter of fact - crazy.