Answer:
A. My mother, a doctor, hopes that I follow her career path.
Explanation:
The subject my mother preceding the appositive provides sufficient identification on its own, so you need to use commas around the appositive a doctor.
Chapter 1
-The narrator is Scout Finch.
-The setting is in Maycomb, Alabama.
-Atticus is the father and his wife died while Scout was two years old.
-Dill comes over the play during the summer with Scout and Jem.
-They are interested in Boo Radley and his house.
-The Radley house is mysterious because no one has ever entered it.
Chapter 2
-Scout hates her first year of school because her teacher wont let her read at home.
-Scout gets in trouble for standing up for Walter Cunningham.
-The teacher, Miss Caroline, tried to give Walter a quarter, but he didn't take it because he knew that he would have to repay her, but he can't.
Chapter 3
-Jem invites Walter to eat lunch at his house with Scout.
-Burris Ewell is in the same class as Scout and Walter but only comes to school the first day.
Chapter 4
-Scout and Jem find prizes in a knothole next to the Radley's, so they take them.
-The kids start playing a game where they impersonate Boo Radley, and this game ended due to Atticus finding out about it.
Chapter 5
-The kids try and slip a note through the Radley house window, but they get caught by Atticus.
Chapter 6
-It is Dill's last day in Maycomb, so the kids try and enter the Radley's backyard.
-They enter it and go on the back porch until they hear a shotgun.
-The kids start to run, but Jem's pants get caught on the fence, so he takes them off to run.
-When Jem comes back to pick them up, they are folded nicely on the fence.
Chapter 7
-The prizes keep appearing everyday, so they get curious until the knothole gets cemented by Nathan Radley.
Chapter 8
-It is snowing in Maycomb, so the kids make a snowman that looks like Mr. Avery.
-Ms. Maudie's house catches on fire, so the whole town stops the fire.
-The kids were watching the house burn near the Radley house.
-Scout discovers that someone put a blanket over her shoulders, and she thinks that it was Boo.
Chapter 9
-Atticus is chosen to defend Tom Robinson, and he accepts.
-Everybody at school calls him a n****-lover, but Scout made a promise that she won't punch anyone.
-Uncle Jack, Aunt Alexandra, and Francis come over for dinner.
-Francis calls Atticus a n****-lover, and Scout punches him.
Chapter 10
-Atticus gets Jem and Scout air rifles for Christmas, and he tells them that it is a sin to kill mockingbirds.
-There is a rabid dog on the Finch's street, so Atticus shoots it.
Hope this helps
Children who are witnesses of their parents being divorced may not develop well emotionally. A divorce may affect their attachment towards their maternal and paternal figure. They also won't have the idea of how relationships work.
When it comes to school aged children they will only be raised by one parent at a time. The help that will be provided and the observations made might have an effect on the development of a child's traits or habits.
Teenagers are at the age where they're highly developed and understand the idea of marriage, relationships etc. better than children. They're more likely to accept the fact that their parents will separate and are able to understand and analyse the reasons behind their actions.
I hope I helped :)
Answer:
It produces shivers down the spine, or a feeling of unease.
Explanation:
The narrator hasn't said anything in this excerpt that makes them hard to believe, or unreliable. This excerpt is not particularly optimistic either. There is no blood and gore, but the narrator is clearly made uncomfortable by the painting. So the excerpt produces shivers down the spine, or a feeling of unease.
Part 3 is related to the claim because it describes what problems the nation is facing because of the claim's statement. It serves to show that there are a wide range of activities that people with disabilities will not be able to do, simply because they are discriminated against. Hence, "America was founded on the basis that all men are created equal...", which you will likely hear a lot more than just once. :)