The correct option is A. What she was, and where she was born, he never informed us: probably, she had neither money nor name to recommend her, or he would scarcely have kept the union from his father<span>. This part of the passage clearly tells the reader that the woman probably wasn't from the upper class, nor did she look the part. If she were an upper-class lady, Hindley would have told his father about his marriage. Plus, this is a narrative told by Nelly, a domestic servant and therefore a working-class woman, who can certainly recognize someone who looks and acts like a low-born.</span>
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Their personal identity is changed, and their thoughts are no longer their own.
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I think it is just the dumbest thing that woman and black people are looked down on, or seen as less than white men by some people. You can't help what you're born into, it's not something that you can choose and yet there are still issues today about whether a woman should get this job or a man should get it. It's important because it shows that they are jut as capable as anyone else, it might encourage others to try for a job that they normally wouldn't have. As soon as someone is brave enough to try something, It'll lead to others trying new things too and then we're all better off.
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