1) dominance theory equates women's demeanor, the demeanor women have in general
2) In the end, Wareing (2005) notes that men and women's communication habits of both men and women
In The House on Mango Street, gender is portrayed as a social construction – something that people learn as they grow up, not something they're born with. Men have it easy on Mango Street – it's much easier for the male characters of the novel to live up to the gender role prescribed for them than it is for women.
Not that sure tbh
Best luck with your studying
A) He thinks magician has turned giants into windmills
Answer:
I was playing in the living room. Something caught my eye, and I got up to go to the window. I saw red, then I realized it was a fire truck. My heart thumped; the ambulance had here before because of an elderly man, but the elderly man didn't live here anymore. "Mom..." I said in a low voice. My mom got up and looked outside, and then commotion began. A police man was banging on the doors, yelling, "Hello! Hello?! It's the fire department, open up!" and when my mom opened the door (we were on the 2nd floor, so the police man hadn't gotten to us yet) smoke was filling the hallway. My heart skipped a beat as the police man ran up to us, ushering us outside, the thick smell of plastic and smoke choking my lungs. There wasn't actually any real fire in the end; the drying machine had overheated.
Explanation:
it's a personal event so i dunno if u could use it lol