Answer:
Ello mate, Here you're answer!
Explanation:
Here's what I've found ↓
The tone at the beginning of Birthplace is shameful and disappointed. It reflects the way her mother felt when she gave birth to her and saw that she had a girl and not a boy. This point in the poem, however, radiates strength and reflects the narrator's want to fight against injustice. The line "I’ll peel from the wall that ashamed look of my mother" says that she is no longer ashamed of herself for being born a certain way. She's saying that when she returns to her birthplace, she won't see it as the place where her mother's greatest disappointment was born. It is now a place where a strong woman was born.
OK I’ll answer this in the comment section
<span>Atticus loses, but the African American community showers him with gifts.
This is ironic because we do not normally give the loser gifts. In this case the African American community are giving gifts to Atticus because of the way he stood up for Tom Robinson. He made sure that the truth came out and treated the African American community with respect.
Bob Ewell wins the court decision, but vows to get Atticus if it takes the rest of his life.
This is ironic because the winner is not expected to get revenge on the loser - he won! However, even though Bob Ewell wins the court decision he feels disrespected by Atticus. By revealing the possible truth of his violence towards Mayella and showing him to be a liar, Atticus shows Bob Ewell to be a bad person even though he is not on trial. This foreshadows the events that happen at the end of the book.
Dill wants to be a clown, but a clown that laughs at the crowd.
This is ironic because clown is not the person who laughs at the crowd. The crowd laughs at the clown. Jem points this out and says, "You go it backwards...</span>Clowns are sad, it’s folks that laugh at
them." This further shows Dill's characterization.
Answer:
At lunch, Omri went to the store to acquire an Indian chief solely for the bow and arrows, and then he returned to the handicrafts area to begin building the tepee he had promised Little Bear.
Explanation:
After school, Omri went to the library and found "On the Trail of the Iroquois". He read numerous interesting passages, including one on the Iroquois Indians known as "The Five Nations," which he found particularly interesting. Their adversary was the Algonquin tribe, and the Iroquois received assistance from the English. When the bell rang, Omri walked into the classroom. In the morning, Omri was informed by Patrick that there were more plastic Indian toys available at the Yapps store. So, during lunch, he went to the store to purchase an Indian chief for use with the bow and arrows and then returned to the handicrafts room to finish building the tepee he had promised Little Bear. In the evening, school let out later than usual, so Omri returned home to find his room in disarray, with twigs and grass scattered everywhere, but he did discover Little Bear, who had finished half of the longhouse and was standing next to it. He then placed the Indian chief in a cabinet, opened it, and the chief looked at Omri with astonishment. The chief then succumbed to his panic. It wasn't long before Little Bear arrived to take the headpiece and cloak, and shortly after that, Omri's father sent him to the kitchen to go buy a replacement seed tray for the one he had previously taken.