Answer:
1. He believed education was important (thought)
2. He thought fathers ought to set an example (action)
3. I think there is something about bullies, but I don't remember the details of how he handled that. (action)
For #4 you could find something he said to the school board about what he believed. (speech)
Explanation:
Answer:
tell,say,believe,reply,respond
― Mark Twain<span>, </span><span>The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
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"That is just the way with some people. They get down on a thing when they don’t know nothing about it.”
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The funny thing is that for example and that example i'm going to use, you might also see it or experience, let's say when your talking to a friend, and were talking about a trouble someone caused you and while you were explaining it a random person who over-heard you got into the conversation to and started complaining without even knowing what or WHOM you were talking about :-/.
Twain might have used this because that's how some people are and the impact is that sometimes before you or anyone to be exact don't jump into conclusions or interrupt someone when there talking unless they want you to speak to them.
In Chapter Eight, we come to see that though we might be tempted to hold Victor responsible for the verdict (Justine's trial), this is an overly simplistic view of events. Frankenstein's decision to conceal the truth is terribly misguided; Shelley, however, gives us no indication that he does this in order to absolve himself of guilt. "Fangs of remorse" tear at him, and, in his own heart at least, he bears the guilt for both William's murder and Justine's execution. He can share his terrible secret with no one, and is thus utterly isolated, an outcast from human society.