Answer:
B
Explanation:
Remark
What huck sees and how he interprets it is what this short comment is about. I would pick
<em>Despite his lack of formal upbringing, Huck has good intuition when it comes to reading situations.</em>
<em />
Yes, he exaggerates some, but the exaggeration does nothing to distort what he's looking at.
He doesn't always look for humor and sometimes he just plain wrong. I think it's Chapter 16 where Jim talks about the value of children and concludes that Solomon was not as wise as he was made out to be. Jim's insightful analysis is way above Huck's head and the passage is neither funny nor Jim's analysis exaggerated.
First person
Explanation:
"Sea air sours it, I heard." The words are thoughts of the character
Answer:
In To Kill a Mockingbird, Tom Robinson is not guilty of anything. He is accused, by Bob and Mayella Ewell, of raping Mayella. But it seems abundantly clear that Mayella and Bob are lying and that Tom is completely innocent of any crime. When Atticus questions Bob Ewell on the stand, he makes it clear to note that Mayella had a wound on her right eye and had wounds all around her neck. Therefore, it would be more likely that someone with two good working hands who is also left-handed was likely to be the attacker. Bob Ewell is left-handed with two good working hands. Tom has only one good working hand, his right, and his left hand is basically useless due to an accident with a cotton gin. Given the testimony and this evidence and the fact that it was well known that Bob beat his children, including Mayella, it is fairly clear that Bob was probably Mayella's attacker and that she conspired with Bob to blame Tom for everything, knowing that a black man in 1930s Maycomb was likely to get convicted in spite of any evidence that might suggest his innocence.
Explanation:
Answer:
Because of their own bias and prior understanding and knowledge. Hope I helped!
Answer:
2. The strange thoughts that come when our minds are at rest.
Explanation:
William Shakespeare's "Romeo and Ju li et" revolves around the tragic love story of two lovers who chose death than being separated. The romantic tragedy focuses on how societal and family pressures often became the obstacle for successful love and how detrimental it can be.
In the given passage from Act I scene iv of the story, Mercutio was describing his dream about<em> "Queen Mab"</em> which Romeo declares nonsense. Then, Mercutio declares that dreams are the<em> "children of an idle brain"</em>, the result of a 'free' mind with nothing to do. According to him, such dreams came out from nothing and are merely "<em>vain fantasy</em>."
Thus, the correct answer is option 2.