I don't know what story this is from or what is really happening; however, from what I can tell, the author uses the phrase "the annals of parental vigilance" to heavily imply that Daisy's parents are extremely rigid in how they raise her, in an orthodox fashion. "Annals" is defined as yearly record keeping, and "parental vigilance" means that the mother is one that is always watching and correcting her child (from what I can tell.
Wow very inspiring I see.
I think this does: <span>The novel's action begins at the start of summer, when life is in its fullest bloom, and ends at the start of autumn.</span>
Answer:
2)it determines the phonotactic constraints in the language
<span>An antagonist does not have to be a villain. Although
some use these words interchangeably, they have different meanings. An antagonist
simply disagrees to the viewpoints of the protagonist, while a villain destroys
a person or thing relevant to the plot of the story. Therefore, the key word
here is motive.</span>