If I was in China I would like to learn a lot of China's Chinese words I'm American I can't really learn that many words that fast so doing the tradition of China when they have the party I think it'll be hard for me to adapt because I don't even know how to start off what to do and also if I was in Tokyo ya like Tokyo Japanese Japan I would I know if you were Japanese but I really think that doing the Japanese culture not really got of you also if I was in the
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
In "Two Kinds," June's feelings about her mother change from the beginning to the end of the story in the following way. June is the protagonist of the story and serves as the narrator too. We can read in the firsts pages of the story that June´s mother is so possessive and tries to control the life of her daughter, June. It seems that her mother has so high expectations for her life and her demands upset June. For instance, the mother tries to make June a great piano performer but June is not interested in becoming a musician neither has the talent to do so.
However, when her mother dies, June understands that the interaction they had was because June´s mother had a difficult life in China, and the purpose of her mother's demands was that June could have much better opportunities in the United States to make her successful.
"Two Kinds" is a story written by Amy Tan, that is included in her book of 1989 called "The Joy Luck Club."
C. Pongas ... it's referred to you it ends in s because it's referring to " tu " ( informal way ) and not " usted " ( formal way )
Not an oxymoron, because that is when you juxtapose 2 opposites. "Stupid genius"
Not onomatopoeia, because that is using the sound something makes to describe it. "buzz of a bee"
Not analogy, because that us a comparison between two things to explain. "an orange is like a mango, just different"
A refrain is the repetition of certain lines, like a chorus.