When Dorothy Gaters finally speaks, her message is familiar and firm and, as usual, about fundamentals: "Move your big feet." ''Box out." ''No fouls."
If they don't do that, she doesn't hesitate to take it up a notch on the court.
"You're embarrassing yourselves!" she tells them even when they're winning handily.
Gaters later explains: "Sloppy play is never enjoyable. Sometimes I'll be like, 'I hope this game is over soon. I can go home and watch some real basketball.'"
Penelope, still not quite sure that the begger was indeed her husband, tested him. She ordered her maid to make up Odysseus' bed and move it from their bedchamber into hall outside his room. Odysseus was initially furious when he heard this because one of the bed posts was made from a living olive tree - he himself had designed it this way, and thus it could not be moved unless done by a god; he told her this, and since only Odysseus and Penelope knew this, Penelope accepted that he was her husband. She came running to him, hoping that he would forgive her. He forgave her, because he could understand why she had tested him and because he had passed the test.<span>
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Answer:
superstitious and uptight
Explanation:
he sounds really grumpy
Answer: by comparing humans to clouds
Explanation:
In the excerpt I posed to the comments, it is shown that Shelley conveyed the idea that humans were constantly mobile by comparing us to clouds.
Clouds are constantly moving across the surface of the earth as they are pushed by winds to other areas. In likening us to them therefore, Shelley is inferring that humans are constantly moving.