Answer:
It made it seem like a horror story at first, with some haunted house that makes their lives miserable but it went in another way as it would've seen, it being first person story, narrator tells us about her husband, John that brought her to this house for the summer. She describes the house in many different ways for example as “a mansion, a huge fancy place, I would say a haunted house.”, it looked like it'd been abandoned of some sort, then the narrator tells us about her illnesses where she can't do much, writing is one of them, John being a doctor took good care of her, even though he has many cases he supports best he can. So the narrator also suffers from her marriage apart from the illness that she has. She describes the house a lot and soon she describes to us her bedroom walls, the bars in her window and especially the yellow wallpaper. She sees many things wrong with the wallpaper and she describes it as strange formless patterns. She also talks about how it changes light colors in the day and then at night is different. She becomes obsess on finding out whats behind that wallpaper and she wants no one around to take a look because she wants to figure it out herself. She finally comes the conclusion that she discovered that the pattern does move and that there is a woman that shakes it. She says that she feels sometimes that there are great many women behind and that there are sometimes that there is just one, that she crawls around fast. At the end she becomes very insane and tells John that she is finally out of the wallpaper and that in fact she was that woman trapped inside the paper and that he can’t put her back inside.
Answer:
*says in passive voice* hey
Explanation:
The answer to the first question is A, Humble.
The second answer is D, a desire to know everything
The correct version of these two sentences when combined is:
When we were in Europe on vacation, we usually flew on airplanes: however, sometimes we took the train.
We apply the semi-colon to indicate that they have different ideas, and that they are clauses being joined into one sentence.