Maps
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The tone of this excerpt from Maureen Daly's famous story "Sixteen" is primarily intimate, but also frank, sentimental, chatty, colloquial, and a little bit impassioned. The narrator is describing, informally and enthusiastically, a casual, but seemingly very cherished, encounter with a boy, and she appears to be very comfortable sharing her intimate feelings with her interlocutor, judging by some of her expressions - "don't be silly, I told you before, I get around," "Don't you see? This was different," or "It was all so lovely."
One literary critic commented that "Ionesco shows us how we became Nazis"The sentence from rhinoceroses that best supports this view is and there in fact amidst the debris was a rhinoceros it's head lowered trumpeting in an agonized and agonizing voice and and turning vainly round and round.<span> The naswer is letter B</span>
Society would be very chaotic and full of mistrust as people will say things they didn’t mean to say. It is human nature to protect and not reveal certain thoughts.
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